4.7 Article

Differential Metabotypes in Synovial Fibroblasts and Synovial Fluid in Hip Osteoarthritis Patients Support Inflammatory Responses

期刊

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23063266

关键词

osteoarthritis; synovial fibroblast; glutamine; IL6; metabolism; inflammation

资金

  1. MRC-Versus Arthritis Centre for Musculoskeletal Ageing Research [MR/K00414X/1]
  2. Versus Arthritis [21530, 21812]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the metabolic profile of synovial joint fluid and synovial fibroblasts in obese and normal-weight hip osteoarthritis (OA) patients. The results show that the metabolic characteristics differ between obese and normal-weight patients, with alterations in lactate, glucose, and glutamine-glutamate metabolic pathway. In addition, inhibition of glutamine metabolism reduces the inflammatory activity of OA synovial fibroblasts. These findings suggest that targeting cellular metabolism may provide a potential therapeutic approach for reducing joint inflammation in obese patients with OA.
Changes in cellular metabolism have been implicated in mediating the activated fibroblast phenotype in a number of chronic inflammatory disorders, including pulmonary fibrosis, renal disease and rheumatoid arthritis. The aim of this study was therefore to characterise the metabolic profile of synovial joint fluid and synovial fibroblasts under both basal and inflammatory conditions in a cohort of obese and normal-weight hip OA patients. Furthermore, we sought to ascertain whether modulation of a metabolic pathway in OA synovial fibroblasts could alter their inflammatory activity. Synovium and synovial fluid was obtained from hip OA patients, who were either of normal-weight or obese and were undergoing elective joint replacement surgery. The synovial fluid metabolome was determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The metabolic profile of isolated synovial fibroblasts in vitro was characterised by lactate secretion, oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) using the Seahorse XF Analyser. The effects of a small molecule pharmacological inhibitor and siRNA targeted at glutaminase-1 (GLS1) were assessed to probe the role of glutamine metabolism in OA synovial fibroblast function. Obese OA patient synovial fluid (n = 5) exhibited a different metabotype, compared to normal-weight patient fluid (n = 6), with significantly increased levels of 1, 3-dimethylurate, N-Nitrosodimethylamine, succinate, tyrosine, pyruvate, glucose, glycine and lactate, and enrichment of the glutamine-glutamate metabolic pathway, which correlated with increasing adiposity. In vitro, isolated obese OA fibroblasts exhibited greater basal lactate secretion and aerobic glycolysis, and increased mitochondrial respiration when stimulated with pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF alpha, compared to fibroblasts from normal-weight patients. Inhibition of GLS1 attenuated the TNF alpha-induced expression and secretion of IL-6 in OA synovial fibroblasts. These findings suggest that altered cellular metabolism underpins the inflammatory phenotype of OA fibroblasts, and that targeted inhibition of glutamine-glutamate metabolism may provide a route to reducing the pathological effects of joint inflammation in OA patients who are obese.

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