4.7 Article

Senescent Tissue-Resident Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Are an Internal Source of Inflammation in Human Osteoarthritic Cartilage

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.725071

Keywords

osteoarthritis; mesenchymal stem cell; cell senescence; cartilage; SASP

Funding

  1. NIH [P30GM122732, 1R61AR076807-01]

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Aging OA-MSC in human osteoarthritic cartilage can lead to cell senescence, fibrosis, and inflammation, expressing a pro-inflammatory senescence associated secretory phenotype that may contribute to OA pathogenesis. OAC acts as the main recipient of inflammatory signals by expressing receptors of cytokines. Through replication-driven OAC dedifferentiation and MSC senescence, OA-MSC becomes an internal source of sterile inflammation in human cartilage joint.
Human osteoarthritic cartilage contains not only chondrocytes (OACs), but also mesenchymal stromal cells (OA-MSCs), whose abundance increases during osteoarthritis (OA). However, it is not clear how OA-MSC contributes to OA pathogenesis. Here, we show that aging OA-MSC plays an important role in cell senescence, fibrosis, and inflammation in cartilage. Protein array analysis indicates that OA-MSC expresses pro-inflammatory senescence associated secretory phenotype (SASP) including IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, and CXCL1, 5, and 6, which play key roles in OA pathogenesis. OAC is a main recipient of the inflammatory signals by expressing receptors of cytokines. RNAseq analysis indicates that the transition from normal cartilage stromal cells (NCSCs) to OA-MSC during aging results in activation of SASP gene expression. This cell transition process can be recapitulated by a serial passage of primary OAC in cell culture comprising (1) OAC dedifferentiation into NCSC-like cells, and (2) its subsequent senescence into pro-inflammatory OA-MSC. While OAC dedifferentiation is mediated by transcriptional repression of chondrogenic gene expression, OA-MSC senescence is mediated by transcriptional activation of SASP gene expression. We postulate that, through replication-driven OAC dedifferentiation and mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) senescence, OA-MSC becomes an internal source of sterile inflammation in human cartilage joint.

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