Spaceflight and hind limb unloading induces an arthritic phenotype in knee articular cartilage and menisci of rodents

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作者
Andy T. Kwok
Nequesha S. Mohamed
Johannes F. Plate
Raghunatha R. Yammani
Samuel Rosas
Ted A. Bateman
Eric Livingston
Joseph E. Moore
Bethany A. Kerr
Jingyun Lee
Cristina M. Furdui
Li Tan
Mary L. Bouxsein
Virginia L. Ferguson
Louis S. Stodieck
David C. Zawieja
Michael D. Delp
Xiao W. Mao
Jeffrey S. Willey
机构
[1] Wake Forest School of Medicine,Department of Radiation Oncology
[2] Wake Forest School of Medicine,Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
[3] Wake Forest School of Medicine,Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Molecular Medicine
[4] University of North Carolina,Department of Biomedical Engineering
[5] Wake Forest School of Medicine,Department of Cancer Biology
[6] Wake Forest School of Medicine,Proteomics and Metabolomics Shared Resource, Comprehensive Cancer Center
[7] Harvard Medical School,Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
[8] University of Colorado At Boulder,Department of Mechanical Engineering
[9] University of Colorado At Boulder,BioServe Space Technologies, Aerospace Engineering Sciences
[10] Texas A&M University Medical School,Department of Medical Physiology
[11] Florida State University,Department of Nutrition, Food and Exercise Sciences
[12] Loma Linda University,Division of Biomedical Engineering Sciences (BMES), Department of Basic Sciences
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摘要
Reduced knee weight-bearing from prescription or sedentary lifestyles are associated with cartilage degradation; effects on the meniscus are unclear. Rodents exposed to spaceflight or hind limb unloading (HLU) represent unique opportunities to evaluate this question. This study evaluated arthritic changes in the medial knee compartment that bears the highest loads across the knee after actual and simulated spaceflight, and recovery with subsequent full weight-bearing. Cartilage and meniscal degradation in mice were measured via microCT, histology, and proteomics and/or biochemically after: (1) ~ 35 days on the International Space Station (ISS); (2) 13-days aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis; or (3) 30 days of HLU, followed by a 49-day weight-bearing readaptation with/without exercise. Cartilage degradation post-ISS and HLU occurred at similar spatial locations, the tibial-femoral cartilage-cartilage contact point, with meniscal volume decline. Cartilage and meniscal glycosaminoglycan content were decreased in unloaded mice, with elevated catabolic enzymes (e.g., matrix metalloproteinases), and elevated oxidative stress and catabolic molecular pathway responses in menisci. After the 13-day Shuttle flight, meniscal degradation was observed. During readaptation, recovery of cartilage volume and thickness occurred with exercise. Reduced weight-bearing from either spaceflight or HLU induced an arthritic phenotype in cartilage and menisci, and exercise promoted recovery.
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