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Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids

Background: Osteoarthritis (OA) is a complex, age-related multifactorial degenerative disease of diarthrodial joints marked by impaired mobility, joint stiffness, pain, and a significant decrease in quality of life. Among other risk factors, such as genetics and age, hyper-physiological mechanical c...

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Autores principales: Bloks, Niek GC, Dicks, Amanda, Harissa, Zainab, Nelissen, Rob GHH, Hajmousa, Ghazaleh, Ramos, Yolande FM, Almeida, Rodrigo Coutinho, Guilak, Farshid, Meulenbelt, Ingrid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Journal Experts 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38014245
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3568544/v1
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author Bloks, Niek GC
Dicks, Amanda
Harissa, Zainab
Nelissen, Rob GHH
Hajmousa, Ghazaleh
Ramos, Yolande FM
Almeida, Rodrigo Coutinho
Guilak, Farshid
Meulenbelt, Ingrid
author_facet Bloks, Niek GC
Dicks, Amanda
Harissa, Zainab
Nelissen, Rob GHH
Hajmousa, Ghazaleh
Ramos, Yolande FM
Almeida, Rodrigo Coutinho
Guilak, Farshid
Meulenbelt, Ingrid
author_sort Bloks, Niek GC
collection PubMed
description Background: Osteoarthritis (OA) is a complex, age-related multifactorial degenerative disease of diarthrodial joints marked by impaired mobility, joint stiffness, pain, and a significant decrease in quality of life. Among other risk factors, such as genetics and age, hyper-physiological mechanical cues are known to play a critical role in the onset and progression of the disease (1). It has been shown that post-mitotic cells, such as articular chondrocytes, heavily rely on methylation at CpG sites to adapt to environmental cues and maintain phenotypic plasticity. However, these long-lasting adaptations may eventually have a negative impact on cellular performance. We hypothesize that hyper-physiologic mechanical loading leads to the accumulation of altered epigenetic markers in articular chondrocytes, resulting in a loss of the tightly regulated balance of gene expression that leads to a dysregulated state characteristic of the OA disease state. Results: We showed that hyper-physiological loading evokes consistent changes in ML-tCpGs associated with expression changes in ITGA5, CAV1, and CD44, among other genes, which together act in pathways such as anatomical structure morphogenesis (GO:0009653) and response to wound healing (GO:0042060). Moreover, by comparing the ML-tCpGs and their associated pathways to tCpGs in OA pathophysiology, we observed a modest but particular interconnected overlap with notable genes such as CD44 and ITGA5. These genes could indeed represent lasting detrimental changes to the phenotypic state of chondrocytes due to mechanical perturbations that occurred earlier in life. The latter is further suggested by the association between methylation levels of ML-tCpGs mapped to CD44 and OA severity. Conclusion: Our findings confirm that hyper-physiological mechanical cues evoke changes to the methylome-wide landscape of chondrocytes, concomitant with detrimental changes in positional gene expression levels (ML-tCpGs). Since CAV1, ITGA5, and CD44 are subject to such changes and are central and overlapping with OA-tCPGs of primary chondrocytes, we propose that accumulation of hyper-physiological mechanical cues can evoke long-lasting, detrimental changes in set points of gene expression that influence the phenotypic healthy state of chondrocytes. Future studies are necessary to confirm this hypothesis.
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spelling pubmed-106809092023-11-27 Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids Bloks, Niek GC Dicks, Amanda Harissa, Zainab Nelissen, Rob GHH Hajmousa, Ghazaleh Ramos, Yolande FM Almeida, Rodrigo Coutinho Guilak, Farshid Meulenbelt, Ingrid Res Sq Article Background: Osteoarthritis (OA) is a complex, age-related multifactorial degenerative disease of diarthrodial joints marked by impaired mobility, joint stiffness, pain, and a significant decrease in quality of life. Among other risk factors, such as genetics and age, hyper-physiological mechanical cues are known to play a critical role in the onset and progression of the disease (1). It has been shown that post-mitotic cells, such as articular chondrocytes, heavily rely on methylation at CpG sites to adapt to environmental cues and maintain phenotypic plasticity. However, these long-lasting adaptations may eventually have a negative impact on cellular performance. We hypothesize that hyper-physiologic mechanical loading leads to the accumulation of altered epigenetic markers in articular chondrocytes, resulting in a loss of the tightly regulated balance of gene expression that leads to a dysregulated state characteristic of the OA disease state. Results: We showed that hyper-physiological loading evokes consistent changes in ML-tCpGs associated with expression changes in ITGA5, CAV1, and CD44, among other genes, which together act in pathways such as anatomical structure morphogenesis (GO:0009653) and response to wound healing (GO:0042060). Moreover, by comparing the ML-tCpGs and their associated pathways to tCpGs in OA pathophysiology, we observed a modest but particular interconnected overlap with notable genes such as CD44 and ITGA5. These genes could indeed represent lasting detrimental changes to the phenotypic state of chondrocytes due to mechanical perturbations that occurred earlier in life. The latter is further suggested by the association between methylation levels of ML-tCpGs mapped to CD44 and OA severity. Conclusion: Our findings confirm that hyper-physiological mechanical cues evoke changes to the methylome-wide landscape of chondrocytes, concomitant with detrimental changes in positional gene expression levels (ML-tCpGs). Since CAV1, ITGA5, and CD44 are subject to such changes and are central and overlapping with OA-tCPGs of primary chondrocytes, we propose that accumulation of hyper-physiological mechanical cues can evoke long-lasting, detrimental changes in set points of gene expression that influence the phenotypic healthy state of chondrocytes. Future studies are necessary to confirm this hypothesis. American Journal Experts 2023-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10680909/ /pubmed/38014245 http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3568544/v1 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Bloks, Niek GC
Dicks, Amanda
Harissa, Zainab
Nelissen, Rob GHH
Hajmousa, Ghazaleh
Ramos, Yolande FM
Almeida, Rodrigo Coutinho
Guilak, Farshid
Meulenbelt, Ingrid
Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids
title Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids
title_full Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids
title_fullStr Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids
title_full_unstemmed Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids
title_short Hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active CpG sites in neo-cartilage organoids
title_sort hyper-physiologic mechanical cues, as an osteoarthritis disease relevant environmental perturbation, cause a critical shift in set-points of methylation at transcriptionally active cpg sites in neo-cartilage organoids
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10680909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38014245
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3568544/v1
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