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Blockade of Activin Receptor IIB Protects Arthritis Pathogenesis by Non‐Amplification of Activin A‐ACVR2B‐NOX4 Axis Pathway

Although activin receptor IIB (ACVR2B) is emerging as a novel pathogenic receptor, its ligand and assembled components (or assembly) are totally unknown in the context of osteoarthritis (OA) pathogenesis. The present results suggest that upregulation of ACVR2B and its assembly could affect osteoarth...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jeon, Jimin, Lee, Hyemi, Jeon, Min‐Seung, Kim, Seok‐Jung, Choi, Cham, Kim, Ki Woo, Yang, Dong Joo, Lee, Sangho, Bae, Yong‐Soo, Choi, Won Il, Jung, Juyeon, Eyun, Seong‐il, Yang, Siyoung
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10190289/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36950748
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202205161
Descripción
Sumario:Although activin receptor IIB (ACVR2B) is emerging as a novel pathogenic receptor, its ligand and assembled components (or assembly) are totally unknown in the context of osteoarthritis (OA) pathogenesis. The present results suggest that upregulation of ACVR2B and its assembly could affect osteoarthritic cartilage destruction. It is shown that the ACVR2B ligand, activin A, regulates catabolic factor expression through ACVR2B in OA development. Activin A Tg mice (Col2a1‐Inhba) exhibit enhanced cartilage destruction, whereas heterozygous activin A KO mice (Inhba(+/−) ) show protection from cartilage destruction. In silico analysis suggests that the Activin A‐ACVR2B axis is involved in Nox4‐dependent ROS production. Activin A Tg:Nox4 KO (Col2a1‐Inhba:Nox4(−/−) ) mice show inhibition of experimental OA pathogenesis. NOX4 directly binds to the C‐terminal binding site on ACVR2B‐ACVR1B and amplifies the pathogenic signal for cartilage destruction through SMAD2/3 signaling. Together, the findings reveal that the ACVR2B assembly, which comprises Activin A, ACVR2B, ACVR1B, Nox4, and AP‐1‐induced HIF‐2α, accelerates OA development. Furthermore, it is shown that shRNA‐mediated ACVR2B knockdown or trapping ligands of ACVR2B abrogate OA development by competitively disrupting the ACVR2B‐Activin A interaction. These results suggest that the ACVR2B assembly is required to amplify osteoarthritic cartilage destruction and could be a potential therapeutic target in efforts to treat OA.