Article Text
Abstract
Background Osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative joint disease characterised by cartilage degradation and chondrocyte hypertrophy. A recent study showed that Rac1 promoted expression of MMP13 and chondrocyte hypertrophy within the growth plate. These findings warrant further investigations on the roles of Rac1 in OA development and therapy in animal models.
Objective To investigate the role and mechanistic pathway of Rac1 involvement in pathological changes of OA chondrocytes in vitro and OA development in vivo, as well as to develop a strategy of modulating Rac1 activity for OA treatment.
Material and methods OA and normal cartilage from human or mice were used for immunohistochemical study and Rac1 activity assay. Chondrocytes treated with IL1β and the untreated control were subjected to the Rac1 activity assay. Chondrocytes transfected with CA-Rac1, DN-Rac1 or GFP were cultured under conditions for inducing calcification. To evaluate the effect of Rac1 in OA development, an OA model was created by anterior cruciate ligament transection in mice. CA-Rac1, DN-Rac1 and GFP lentivirus, or NSC23766, were injected intra-articularly. Joints were subjected to histological analysis.
Results It was found that there is aberrant Rac1 activation in human OA cartilage. Rac1 activity could also be elevated by IL1β. Additionally, activated Rac1 promoted expression of MMP13, ADAMTS-5 and COLX by chondrocytes, partially through the β-catenin pathway. Moreover, activation of Rac1 in knee joints by CA-Rac1 lentivirus accelerated OA progression, while inhibition of Rac1 activity by DN-Rac1 lentivirus or Rac1 inhibitor NSC23766 delayed OA development. Therefore, we developed a strategy of controlled release of NSC23766 from chitosan microspheres to OA joints, which effectively protected cartilage from destruction.
Conclusions These findings demonstrated that Rac1 activity is implicated in OA development. Also, controlled release of Rac1 inhibitor is a promising strategy for OA treatment.
- Osteoarthritis
- Treatment
- Chondrocytes
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Introduction
Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most commonly occurring degenerative joint disease that lacks functional pharmacological treatment. In OA chondrocytes, the hypertrophy or matrix degradation-related genes including COL10A1 (collagen, type X, α1),1 ,2 MMP13 (matrix metallo-peptidase-13),3 ADAMTS-5 (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs 5)4 ,5 and Runx2 (runt-related transcription factor-2)6 are upregulated. This, in turn, leads to cartilage-specific extracellular matrix degradation and disruption of cartilage homeostasis. Hence, the study of protein molecules regulating hypertrophy, or matrix degradation-related genes, is important for developing effective therapeutics for OA.
Recent studies7–12 from different groups reveal the important roles of small GTPases in governing chondrocyte development, hypertrophy and maturation during endochondral bone formation. Rac1, one of small GTPases is required for chondrocyte condensation mediated by N-cadherin and acts as a positive regulator of chondrogenesis and chondrocyte hypertrophy.7 ,8 The regulatory effect of Rac1 on chondrocyte differentiation was verified by genetically modified mice. In vivo, Rac1-deficient growth plates displayed delayed ossification, reduced chondrocyte proliferation and increased apoptosis,9 partly due to reduced mitogenic activity through Rac1-iNOS-NO signalling.10 Similar results were also observed in limb bud development.11 ,12 As Rac1 plays important roles in the physical hypertrophy and ossification of growth plate chondrocytes during bone formation, it is logical to investigate whether Rac1 is also implicated in pathological hypertrophy and ossification of articular chondrocyte in OA joints. A very recent study by Long and colleagues demonstrated that Rac1 was required for fibronectin fragment-mediated MMP13 production by articular chondrocytes in vitro.13 Therefore, this warrants further study on the relationship between Rac1 and OA development in vivo, as well as developing a new OA treatment strategy through modulation of Rac1 activity.
We hypothesise that Rac1 activity has a significant relationship with OA development. Inhibition of Rac1 activity appears to be a promising strategy for OA treatment. Therefore, chondrocytes were cultured under conditions for inducing hypertrophy and calcification, and the effect and mechanistic pathway of Rac1 involvement in chondrocyte hypertrophy and calcification were investigated in vitro. The role of Rac1 activity in OA development in vivo was investigated with mice OA knee joints.
Methods and materials
Human cartilage and chondrocytes
Human OA cartilage was obtained from patients undergoing total knee replacement surgery. Control normal cartilage was obtained postmortem from human subjects with no history of OA. The patient's consent, as well as approval of the local ethics committee were obtained prior to harvesting of human tissue samples. Human articular chondrocytes were harvested by overnight incubation of 1 mm2 cartilage slices with 2 mg/mL of collagenase P in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 40 μg/mL gentamicin at 37°C. After resuspension and filtration through a 0.7 μm filter, cells were cultured in a 24-well plate at a seeding density of 2×105 cells/mL.
Protein extraction from human cartilage and mice joints
Human cartilage or mice joints were first dissected into small pieces (0.5 mm×0.5 mm) with a knife, and then milled in 200 μL radioimmune precipitation assay (RIPA) lysis buffer with protease inhibitor cocktail and phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride with a homogeniser (Ultra-Turrax IKA T10 basic). The mixture was then centrifuged at 10 000 g, with the supernatant being collected and used for Rac1 activity assay.
Pull-down assay for Rac1 activity
Rac1 activation assays were performed by using a commercially available Rac1 activation assay kit (Thermo Pierce #16118), in accordance with the manufacturer's protocol.
Western blot analysis
Cellular protein was extracted with RIPA lysis buffer, and the protein concentration was determined with a bicinchoninic acid assay kit (Pierce #23227). The extracted cellular protein was loaded on SDS-PAGE-denaturing gels. After electrophoresis, proteins were transferred to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane and blocked in 5% bovine serum albumin for 1 h at room temperature. The membrane was incubated overnight at 4°C with anti-Rac1 or anti-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) antibody. After washing in Tris-buffered saline with Tween (TBST), horseradish peroxidase (HRP) secondary antibody was diluted 1:1000 in 5% bovine serum albumin (BSA) solution and incubated with the membrane for 1 h at room temperature. Excess secondary antibody was rinsed off the membrane with TBST, and a chemiluminiscent signal was generated by using western blot detection reagents (ECL, Beyotime Institute of Biotechnology) according to the manufacturer's protocol.
Lentivirus transfection
Chondrocytes were transfected with lentivirus when cells were 30–50% confluent at a multiplicity of infection of 200; 12 h after infection, more than 95% of the cells were still viable and the culture medium was then changed. Three days later, all transfected cells were passaged for use in further experiments.
Chondrocyte calcification in vitro
Cells were trypsinised and seeded into a 24-wells plate, and calcification was induced for 2 weeks with calcification medium, composed of DMEM supplemented with 1% ITS+ (BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, New Jersey, USA), 1% antibiotic-antimycotic solution, 50 μg/mL ascorbate-2-phosphate (Sigma, St Louis, Missouri, USA), 40 μg/mL L-proline (Sigma), 100 nM dexamethasone (Sigma) and 1 nM triiodothyronine (T3) (Sigma). Rac1 inhibitor, NSC23766 (50 μM) was added to the calcification medium to inhibit Rac1 activity during induction of chondrocyte hypertrophy.
Real-time PCR
The mRNA expression levels of genes associated with hypertrophy (MMP13, ADAMTS-5, COLX and Runx2) by human chondrocytes transfected with CA-Rac1, DN-Rac1 or GFP were assessed with real-time PCR. Total cellular RNA was isolated by lysis in TRIzol (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, California, USA). PCR was performed using Brilliant SYBR Green QPCR Master Mix (TakaRa) with a Light Cycler apparatus (ABI 7900HT). The amplification efficiencies of primer pairs were validated to enable quantitative comparison of gene expression. All primer sequences (Invitrogen) were designed using primer V.5.0 software. Each QPCR was performed on at least three different experimental samples, and representative results are presented as target gene expression normalised to the reference gene GAPDH. Error bars represent 1 SD from the mean of technical replicates. The following primer sequences were used: MMP13 sense 5′-ATGCAGTCTTTCTTCGGCTTAG-3′, antisense 5′-ATGCCATCGTGAAGTCTGGT-3′; ADAMTS-5 sense 5′-ATCACCCAATGCCAAGG-3′, antisense 5′-AGCAGAGTAGGAGACAAC-3′; Runx2 sense 5′-GTGATAAATTCAGAAGGGAGG-3′, antisense 5′-CTTTTGCTAATGC TTCGTGT-3′; COLX sense 5′-GTGTTTTACGCTGAACGATACCAA-3′, antisense 5′-ACCTGGTTTCCCTACAGCTGATG-3′.
Immunocytochemical staining
Human chondrocytes cultured in F12 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, were fixed in 4% formalin solution for 15 min and permeabilised with 0.3% Triton X-100 in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 10 min. The fixed cells were then incubated with primary antibodies against ADAMTS-5 (Abcam, ab41037), FLAG (Beyotime Institute of Biotechnology, #AF519), MMP13 (Santa Cruz, sc-30073), COLX (Abcam, ab58632), β-catenin (CST, #9582) followed with goat antimouse or goat antirabbit secondary antibodies conjugated with Alexa Fluor 488 or Alexa Fluor 546 flourescent dyes (Invitrogen). Finally, the cell nuclei were visualised by DAPI (Beyotime Institute of Biotechnology) and viewed under confocal microscopy (Olympus, BX61W1-FV1000, Japan).
Animal OA model
For all experiments with induced OA, C57L/6 mice were used. All animal experiments were approved by the ethics committee of Zhejiang University. OA was induced by anterior cruciate ligament transection. OA pathology developed gradually throughout 8 weeks. Rac1 inhibitor, NSC23766 (30 μg/site, TOCRIS, #2161) dissolved in PBS was administered as an intra-articular injection three times a week. Hyaluronic acid (HA) with Chitosan microspheres encapsulated with NSC23766 were injected into OA joints once a week. Knee joints were isolated at week 4, 6 and 8 and processed for histological analysis. Joints from week 4 were also used for protein extraction and Rac1 activity assay. Intra-articular injections of Lentivirus were carried out at 10, 25 and 40 days post OA surgery, and knee joints were collected at 6 weeks post-OA surgery for histological analysis, immunohistochemical staining and protein extraction. All animals were treated according to standard guidelines approved by the Zhejiang University Ethics Committee (no. ZJU2013105002).
Histological analysis and immunohistochemistry of murine knee joints and human cartilage
The isolated knee joints were processed for histology and immunohistochemistry. Tissues were fixed in 4% (v/v) neutral buffered formalin for 24 h, and decalcified in neutral 10% EDTA solution for 1 month at room temperature. Subsequently, the samples were dehydrated through an alcohol gradient, cleared, and embedded in paraffin blocks. Histological sections (8 μm) were then prepared using a microtome, and six representative sections of each joint from various depths were mounted on slides and subsequently stained with Safranin Orange. The stained sections were photographed digitally under a microscope. Human cartilage sections (8 μm) were prepared using freezing microtome.
Subsequently, human cartilage sections and murine joint sections were incubated overnight with either polyclonal mouse anti-Rac1 antibody (Thermo Pierce #16118), mouse anti-FLAG antibody (Beyotime Institute of Biotechnology), rabbit anti-COLX antibody (Abcam, ab58632) or rabbit anti-ADAMTS-5 antibody (Abcam, ab41037). This was followed by incubation with goat antimouse secondary antibodies conjugated with HRP (Beyotime Institute of Biotechnology) or with Alexa Fluor 488 or Alexa Fluor 546 flourescent dyes (Invitrogen). The stained specimens were photographed digitally and viewed under confocal microscopy (Olympus, BX61W1-FV1000, Japan).
Preparation of chitosan microspheres
Chitosan microspheres were prepared through the water-in-oil (W/O) emulsion solvent diffusion method. Chitosan solution (2% w/v) was prepared by dissolving chitosan (Shanghai Bio Science and Technology) in 2.5% (v/v) acetic acid aqueous solution (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent) at room temperature. The chitosan solution was mixed with inhibitor by stirring overnight with a magnetic stirrer to produce a homogeneous mixture. Then, 5 mL of the mixture was aspirated into a syringe pump, and then added drop-wise into the oil phase (24.72 mL) consisting of 14 mL liquid paraffin (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent), 10 mL petroleum ether, 0.72 mL Span 80 (Sangon Biotech) at a flow rate of 4 mL/h with continuous stirring at 1500 rpm. A syringe needle with 0.2 mm internal diameter was used for this process. After the solvent diffusion procedure, the suspension was cross-linked using 25% (v/v) glutaraldehyde solution as a cross-linking agent. Addition of the cross-linker was carried out three times at time intervals of 15 min, with the following volumes of glutaraldehyde: 0.64, 0.64 and 0.32 mL. Subsequently, the suspension was stirred at room temperature for cross-linking, and then centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 5 min, followed by discarding the supernatant fluid. The microspheres were then washed several times with petroleum ether (three times) (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent), methanol (two times) (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent), acetone (one time) (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent), Isopropyl alcohol (one time) (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent), ethanol (one time) and distilled water (three times). After washing, the microspheres were collected by lyophilising with a freeze dryer to remove residual water. For the control group, pure chitosan microspheres were also prepared by directly dropping chitosan solution into the oil phase under the same conditions.
Statistical analysis
All quantitative data are presented as mean±SD. Non-parametric statistical tests were performed to assess statistically significant differences in the data between groups. Values of p<0.05 were considered to be statistically significant. Significance level was presented as either *p<0.05 or **p<0.01.
Results
Aberrant activation of Rac1 in human OA chondrocytes
To evaluate if there is aberrant Rac1 activation in OA, we compared Rac1 expression and activity by immunohistochemical analysis and pull-down assay in human OA cartilage obtained from subjects undergoing total knee replacement, as well as normal cartilage samples from trauma subjects. We found that total Rac1 was highly expressed in both OA and normal cartilage of mice and humans (figure 1A). However, the activated form of Rac1 (Rac1-GTP) was significantly upregulated only in OA cartilage (figure 1B). We subsequently investigated whether Rac1 could be activated by pro-inflammatory factor IL1β in human articular chondrocytes primary culture system. As shown in figure 1C, in chondrocytes treated with IL1β, Rac1-GTP level was greatly elevated (figure 1C). These data indicated that the elevation of Rac1 activity is a characteristic event during human OA development. This prompted us to investigate the roles of activated Rac1 in chondrocyte pathological change.
Activated Rac1 enhances chondrocyte hypertrophy and expression of matrix degradation-related genes, as well as calcification in vitro
We subsequently investigated whether activated Rac1 predisposes OA phenotype. Accordingly, we introduced constitutively active Rac1 mutant (CA-Rac1) expression within OA chondrocytes and measured the levels of hypertrophy and matrix degradation-related genes. CA-Rac1 expression resulted in higher expression of MMP13 (p=0.056), ADAMTS-5 (p=0.022), COLX (p=0.058) and Runx2 (p=0.021) (figure 2A,B). Conversely, dominant negative Rac1 (DN-Rac1) reduced hypertrophy and expression of matrix degradation-related genes. We then used an in vitro chondrocyte calcification model that can be visualised by Alizarin Red Staining and quantified by an OD value of 405 nm. Direct activation of Rac1 by CA-Rac1 resulted in notably enhanced calcification, while inhibition of Rac1 activity by DN-Rac1 led to decreased formation of calcium nodule (figure 2C,D). Similarly, pharmacological inhibition of Rac1 by NSC23766 also resulted in significantly decreased chondrocyte calcification (figure 2E).
Inhibition of Rac1 activity in articular chondrocytes delays OA development
Evidence for the pathological role of activated Rac1 in vitro prompted us to analyse the functional relevance of Rac1 inhibition to the development of OA in a mouse model. We first investigated whether Rac1 inhibition prevents OA phenotype in vivo. DN-Rac1, CA-Rac1 and GFP lentivirus were injected intra-articularly into mice OA joints. Ectopic expression of these constructs was detected by immunohistochemical assay. Rac1 pull-down assay demonstrated that Rac1 activity in articular chondrocytes was successfully modulated by lentivirus injection (figure 3A). The GFP control group showed similar OA development with a rough cartilage surface and decreased Safranin Orange staining (figure 3B and figure S1) compared with normal cartilage (figure 3D). Interestingly, intra-articular injection of CA-Rac1 lentivirus accelerated OA progression characterised by cartilage degradation, decreased Safranin Orange staining and elevated ADAMTS-5 and COLX expression. Consistently, the ectopic expression of DN-Rac1 in articular cartilage chondrocytes significantly reduced articular cartilage degradation and ADAMTS-5 and COLX expression (figure 3B). The OARSI score results showed that the DN-Rac1 group mice attained the lowest average score of 4.4, while the CA-Rac1 group mice attained the highest average score of 19.5 (figure 3C). Furthermore, CA-Rac1 group mice displayed complete disorganisation or even loss of cartilage structure.
To further confirm the results, we investigated the effect of Rac1 inhibitor NSC23766 on regulating OA cartilage degradation. After 10 days post-OA surgery, NSC23766 dissolved in PBS was injected intra-articularly three times a week, and joints were collected at 4, 6 and 8 weeks postsurgery. Pull-down assay showed that Rac1 activity was successfully decreased upon NSC23766 administration (figure 3E). The representative photographs of the joint showed that NSC23766 administration prevented the formation of tibial cartilage lesions as shown by increased Safranin Orange staining and decreased OARSI score (figure 3F,G and figure S2). Additionally, expression levels of COLX and ADAMTS-5 were correspondingly decreased in chondrocytes of degenerating cartilage upon NSC23766 injection (figure 3H,I). Hence, our in vivo experiments clearly revealed the therapeutic effects of Rac1 inhibition on OA cartilage degeneration in mice.
Rac1 regulates pathological changes in OA chondrocytes partially through the β-catenin pathway
In light of these data, we set out to uncover the underlying mechanisms of how activated Rac1 regulates MMP13, ADAMTS-5 and COLX expression. Rac1 has been recently demonstrated to regulate β-catenin nuclear translocation in canonical Wnt signalling.12 And activation of β-catenin in articular cartilage leads to OA-like phenotype characterised by upregulation of hypertrophy-related genes MMP9, MMP13, ALP, OCN and COLX.14 As shown in figure 4A, β-catenin nuclear accumulation is promoted by CA-Rac1 and impeded by DN-Rac1 in chondrocytes, which correlated with the study of Wu et al12 Additionally, Rac1 activation would further lead to the upregulation of the downstream factors Axin2 and LEF-1 (figure 4B). We therefore hypothesised that activated Rac1 might induce β-catenin nuclear accumulation and subsequently enhance MMP13, ADAMTS-5 and COLX expression. To verify this hypothesis, we block β-catenin nuclear accumulation and check if Rac1-induced OA phenotype can be affected. Since phosphorylation sites Ser191 and Ser605 of β-catenin are key residues for its nuclear localisation,12 we co-transfected β-catenin triple mutant (S191A, S246A, S605A) and Rac1, and checked whether they had a synergistic effect. As shown in figure 4C–E, co-expression of a β-catenin triple mutant with CA-Rac1 considerably abrogated CA-Rac1 induced MMP13, ADAMTS-5 and COLX upregulation (figure 4C–E). Furthermore, this β-catenin triple mutant reinforced the effect of DN-Rac1 on MMP13 and ADAMTS-5 expression (figure 4C–E). Taken together, these data suggested that Rac1 induced MMP13, ADAMTS-5 and COLX expression, partially through the β-catenin pathway.
OA treatment using a cocktail of hyaluronic acid containing chitosan microspheres encapsulating NSC23766
Rac1 inhibitor NSC23766 displayed satisfactory therapeutic effects on the mouse OA model. However, it is usually difficult to maintain an effective concentration of drugs, which hinders their further application. In order to elicit a sustaining effect, a strategy for controlled release of NSC23766 should be developed. Chitosan microsphere represents a useful tool for modified drug delivery as their preparation is quite easy and is useful for controlled drug release. In this study, we applied chitosan microspheres to encapsulate Rac1 inhibitor NSC23766 for controlled release in mice OA joints. The chitosan microspheres were spherical in shape with a mean size of around 100 μm, and had a smooth surface without cracks and winkles, as demonstrated by scanning electron micrographs (figure 5A). The controlled release capacity of chitosan microspheres were determined by measuring the OD value of the extracts at 360 nm (which is specific for NSC23766). NSC23766 was released from microspheres in a biphasic fashion, characterised by a fast release phase during the initial first day followed by slower release on remaining days (figure 5B,C). HA containing chitosan microspheres encapsulating NSC23766 was injected into the OA joints once a week after 10 days postsurgery, and subjects were then analysed by histological examination (figure 5D). Histological examinations were made using Safranin Orange staining to visualise the time course of OA development. Joints in each group were also collected for the Rac1 pull-down assay to verify the inhibitory effect of NSC23766 (figure 5E). When joints were set OA model and further treated with chitosan microspheres containing NSC23766, they displayed markedly decreased cartilage destruction, more Safranin Orange staining and a lower OARSI score compared to joints treated with chitosan microspheres with PBS (control group), thus indicating a delay in OA development (figure 5F,G). Additionally, controlled release of NSC23766 in the joint resulted in decreased expression of chondrocyte hypertrophy marker COLX and matrix degradation gene ADAMTS-5 (figure 5F and figure S3).
In this study, we detected high Rac1 activity in osteoarthritic chondrocytes and demonstrated that aberrant Rac1 activation enhances chondrocyte hypertrophy and matrix degradation-related gene expression. Inhibition of Rac1 via either DN-Rac1 lentivirus infection or Rac1 inhibitor NSC23766 delays experimentally induced OA.
Discussion
This study, for the first time, illustrated the important role of aberrant activation of Rac1 in OA progression, that is, activation of Rac1-accelerated OA development, while inhibition of Rac1 protected cartilage from OA. It was known that there are 20 members of the Rho family of GTPases, which are ‘Ras-like’ proteins. Among these, Cdc42, Rac1 and RhoA have been most intensively studied. Rac1, Cdc42 and RhoA are all expressed in articular and growth plate chondrocytes, but they have distinct functions. Rac1 and Cdc42 accelerate chondrocyte differentiation while RhoA/ROCK signalling exerts an antagonistic effect on chondrocyte development.8 ,9 Here, we found that Rac1 could be activated by the proinflammatory factor IL1β and that Rac1 activation resulted in upregulation of MMP13, ADAMTS-5, COLX and Runx2 expression. This is consistent with the recent in vitro study of Long and colleagues,13 which demonstrated that Rac1 is required for chondrocyte MMP13 production. More importantly, our in vivo study provided solid evidence to confirm that inhibition of Rac1 activity in articular chondrocytes delayed OA development, as evidenced by reduced ADAMTS-5 and COLX expression and cartilage degradation. It therefore remains an exciting prospect to determine the upstream signalling proteins implicated in modulating Rac1 activity in OA development.
However, in this study, the joints of the CA-Rac1 group mice displayed exceedingly severe detrimental outcome, with both surface cartilage and subchondral bone being lost. This observed effect might be explained as follows. As Rac1 upregulates ADAMTS-5 and MMP13, the exceedingly high activity of Rac1 overexpressed by the CA-Rac1 virus might lead to extensive cartilage degradation, resulting in complete loss during a short time duration. This, in turn, further aggravates osteochondral bone damage under mechanical stress after 6 weeks. Therefore, the high activity of Rac1 amplifies the effects of pathological factors on chondrocytes in the OA model induced by anterior cruciate ligament transection.
The Wnt-β-catenin pathway has been implicated not only in the embryogenesis of the joint but also in adult skeletal homeostasis.15–18 Conditional activation of β-catenin in articular chondrocytes predisposes adult mice to OA-phenotype, characterised by accelerated chondrocyte maturation and osteophyte formation.14 Rho GTPases are believed to play a significant role in cytoplasmic β-catenin nuclear transportation in the canonical Wnt signalling pathway.19 Among these, Rac1 was reported to cooperate with JNK2 in β-catenin phosphorylation and nuclear localisation.12 Rac1 ablation phenocopies β-catenin removal in limb development.12 Our data, for the first time, demonstrated that in chondrocytes, β-catenin might partially function downstream of activated Rac1 in modulating pathological changes in chondrocytes. It is of interest to investigate whether Rac1 could directly interact with β-catenin and trigger its cellular translocation. In our study, mutated β-catenin could only partially block CA-Rac1-induced ADAMTS-5 and MMP13 upregulation, which suggests that other pathways independent of the β-catenin pathway might also be involved. This might also explain why in vivo CA-Rac1 virus injection led to a much more severe OA outcome. On the other hand, as Rho GTPases are ‘molecular switches’ for transferring signals from chondrocyte extracellular matrix to downstream effectors,20 Rac1 may induce pathological changes to chondrocytes via its downstream effectors. Also, it is not clear whether Cdc42 and RhoA/ROCK signalling exerts similar or adverse influence on OA pathology. All these possibilities await further detailed studies.
Inhibition of Rac1 exhibited therapeutic effect on OA treatment. This warrants further investigation on developing a strategy of local delivery of Rac1 inhibitor for OA treatment. Local delivery of reagents will be more effective at targeting with less accompanying side effects. Chitosan microspheres have potential application in drug delivery systems because they are a cheap, biocompatible, biodegradable and non-toxic natural polymer that enables the controlled release of many drugs.21–24 HA is an anionic, non-sulfated glycosaminoglycan distributed widely throughout connective, epithelial and neural tissues. It is one of the chief components of articular cartilage and has been used to treat OA of the knee via injection into the joint.25–27 In this study, HA containing chitosan microspheres encapsulated Rac1 inhibitor NSC23766 was injected into OA knees, to enable sustained release as well as lubrication of the joints. The cocktail of HA and biomaterial encapsulated NSC23766 may function as a potential strategy for OA therapy. However, the controlled release system used in this study only guarantees sustained release for 3 days. Nevertheless, the results were very encouraging and supportive of the local delivery strategy. Further studies will aim to develop more efficient delivery systems by controlling size and homogeneity of biomaterial spheres to maintain drug concentration in the OA joint.
In conclusion, our results indicate that Rac1 acts as a crucial mediator of OA cartilage destruction, by regulating catabolic factors, such as MMP13 and ADAMTS-5, and hypertrophy-related factors, such as COLX and Runx2. Moreover, our work provides a new therapeutic strategy for OA treatment through inhibition of the aberrant activation of Rac1 with bioengineering technology.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Huang Lu and Cai Youzhi for providing the human OA cartilage samples from patients undergoing total knee replacement. Additionally, we also thank Professor Wu Ximei for providing the β-catenin mutants.
References
Supplementary materials
Supplementary Data
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Footnotes
Handling editor Tore K Kvien
Contributors SZ: performed research, analysed data, wrote the manuscript. PL, HL, PC and YW: analysed data, discussion of results. SH, QX and XZ: discussion of results. BCH: manuscript correction. YZ, HWO: Design research, manuscript correction.
Funding This work was supported by the National key scientific research projects (2012CB966604), the National Natural Science Fund (81125014, 81101356, 81201395, J1103603, 31000436), Zhejiang province public welfare fund (2012C3112, 2012C33015), Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (LY13C100001), the National High Technology Research and Development Program of China (2012AA020503), Postdoctoral Foundation of China (2013M531465), Postdoctoral Foundation of Zhejiang Province (BSH1302078), as well as sponsored by the Regenerative Medicine in Innovative Medical Subjects of Zhejiang Province and Zhejiang Provincial Program for the Cultivation of High-level Innovative Health Talents.
Competing interests None.
Patient consent Obtained.
Ethics approval Zhejiang University Ethics Committee.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.