Research Division, The Hospital for Special Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York 10021, USA.
Curr Opin Rheumatol. 2011 Sep;23(5):471-8. doi: 10.1097/BOR.0b013e328349c2b1.
This review focuses on the novel stress-induced and proinflammatory mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis, with particular attention to the role of synovitis and the contributions of other joint tissues to cellular events that lead to the onset and progression of the disease and irreversible cartilage damage.
Studies during the past 2 years have uncovered novel pathways that, when activated, cause the normally quiescent articular chondrocytes to become activated and undergo a phenotypic shift, leading to the disruption of homeostasis and ultimately to the aberrant expression of proinflammatory and catabolic genes. Studies in animal models and retrieved human tissues indicate that proinflammatory factors may be produced by the chondrocytes themselves or by the synovium and other surrounding tissues, even in the absence of overt inflammation, and that multiple pathways converge on the upregulation of aggrecanases and collagenases, especially MMP-13. Particular attention has been paid to the contribution of synovitis in posttraumatic joint injury, such as meniscal tears, and the protective role of the pericellular matrix in mediating chondrocyte responses through receptors, such as discoidin domain receptor-2 and syndecan-4. New findings about intracellular signals, including the transcription factors NF-κB, C/EBPβ, ETS, Runx2, and hypoxia-inducible factor-2α, and their modulation by inflammatory cytokines, chemokines, adipokines, Toll-like receptor ligands, and receptor for advanced glycation end-products, as well as CpG methylation and microRNAs, are reviewed.
Further work on mediators and pathways that are common across different models and occur in human osteoarthritis and that impact the osteoarthritis disease process at different stages of initiation and progression will inform us about new directions for targeted therapies.
本篇综述聚焦于骨关节炎发病机制中的新型应激诱导和促炎机制,尤其关注滑膜炎以及其他关节组织在导致疾病发生和进展及不可逆转软骨损伤的细胞事件中的作用。
过去 2 年的研究揭示了新的途径,这些途径被激活后,可使原本静止的关节软骨细胞被激活并发生表型转变,导致内稳失衡,最终导致促炎和分解代谢基因的异常表达。动物模型和检索到的人类组织研究表明,促炎因子可能由软骨细胞本身或滑膜和其他周围组织产生,即使在没有明显炎症的情况下也是如此,而且多种途径都集中在聚集蛋白水解酶和胶原酶(尤其是 MMP-13)的上调上。人们特别关注滑膜炎在创伤后关节损伤(如半月板撕裂)中的作用,以及细胞外基质在通过受体(如盘状结构域受体-2 和 syndecan-4)介导软骨细胞反应中的保护作用。关于细胞内信号的新发现,包括转录因子 NF-κB、C/EBPβ、ETS、Runx2 和缺氧诱导因子-2α,以及它们被炎症细胞因子、趋化因子、脂肪因子、Toll 样受体配体和晚期糖基化终产物受体以及 CpG 甲基化和 microRNAs 调节的情况,都进行了综述。
进一步研究在不同模型中普遍存在且发生在人类骨关节炎中的介质和途径,以及在启动和进展的不同阶段影响骨关节炎疾病进程的介质和途径,将为我们提供针对这些途径的靶向治疗的新方向。