4.6 Article

Disruption of day-to-night changes in circadian gene expression with chronic tendinopathy

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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP284083

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chronomatrix; circadian clock; collagen; electron microscopy; human; tendinopathy; tendon; RNAseq

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By analyzing samples from healthy individuals, researchers found that the gene expression in human tendon tissue exhibited day-to-night changes, with a reduction in collagen I expression during the night. However, chronic tendinopathy patients showed fewer differential gene expressions. This indicates the presence of a conserved circadian clock in healthy human patellar tendons.
Overuse injury in tendon tissue (tendinopathy) is a frequent and costly musculoskeletal disorder and represents a major clinical problem with unsolved pathogenesis. Studies in mice have demonstrated that circadian clock-controlled genes are vital for protein homeostasis and important in the development of tendinopathy. We performed RNA sequencing, collagen content and ultrastructural analyses on human tendon biopsies obtained 12 h apart in healthy individuals to establish whether human tendon is a peripheral clock tissue and we performed RNA sequencing on patients with chronic tendinopathy to examine the expression of circadian clock genes in tendinopathic tissues. We found time-dependent expression of 280 RNAs including 11 conserved circadian clock genes in healthy tendons and markedly fewer (23) differential RNAs with chronic tendinopathy. Further, the expression of COL1A1 and COL1A2 was reduced at night but was not circadian rhythmic in synchronised human tenocyte cultures. In conclusion, day-to-night changes in gene expression in healthy human patellar tendons indicate a conserved circadian clock as well as the existence of a night reduction in collagen I expression.

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