AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the relationship between immune cell infiltration in osteoarthritis (OA) synovium and its effects on monocyte activation and migration.
  • Knee-synovium samples from end-stage OA and trauma patients were analyzed, revealing distinct protein profiles and pro-inflammatory markers linked to immune responses in OA.
  • The findings suggest that the unique protein composition of OA synovium leads to significant activation and functional changes in classical monocytes, which may offer insights for therapeutic strategies.

Article Abstract

Objective: Synovitis with increased infiltration of immune cells is observed in osteoarthritis (OA). Given the inflammatory condition of synovitis, we explored the protein profile of OA synovium (OAS) and its effect on circulating monocytes activation, migration, and functional commitments.

Methods: Knee-synovium was acquired from end-stage OA ( = 8) and trauma patients (Trauma baseline control: TBC; = 8) for characterization using H&E histology, IHC (iNOS), LCMS-QTOF, and MALDI-imaging. Response of peripheral blood monocytes to OAS conditioned-media (OACM) was observed using transwell ( = 6). The migrated cells were captured in SEM, quantified using phase-contrast microphotographs, and their activation receptors (CCR2, CXCR2, CX3CR1, and CD11b), pro-inflammatory genes, and phagocytic potential were studied using flow cytometry, gene expression array/qPCR, and latex beads (LB) phagocytosis assay, respectively.

Results: The Venn diagram displayed 119 typical proteins in OAS, while 55 proteins in TBCS. The STRING protein network analysis indicated distinctive links between proteins and gene ontology (GO) and revealed proteins associated with leukocyte-mediated immunity in OAS as compared to TBC. The MALDI-imaging showed typical localized proteins at 2234.97, 2522.61, 2627.21, 3329.50, and 3539.69 / and IHC confirmed pro-inflammatory iNOS expression in OA synovium. CD14CD16 classical monocytes significantly migrated in OACM and expressed CCR2, CXCR2, and CD11b receptors, TNFRSF11A, MAPK1, S100A8, HSPB1, ITGAL, NFATC1, IL13RA1, CD93, IL-1β, TNF-α, and MYD88 genes and increased LB uptake as compared to SFM.

Conclusion: Our findings suggest that the differential protein profile of OA synovium and the classical monocytes migrated, activated, and functionally committed in response to these mediators could be of therapeutic advantage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9464827PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.904721DOI Listing

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