Department of Orthopaedics, Xiangya Hospital, Central South University, 87 Xiangya Road, Changsha, Hunan, China.
Thurston Arthritis Research Center, Division of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Arthritis Res Ther. 2022 Jul 8;24(1):165. doi: 10.1186/s13075-022-02848-0.
Dietary magnesium deficiency, which is common in modern diet, has been associated with osteoarthritis (OA) susceptibility. Despite this clinical association, no study has addressed if dietary magnesium deficiency accelerates OA development, especially at molecular level. This study aimed to explore aggravating effects of dietary magnesium deficiency on cartilage damage in an injury-induced murine OA model and to determine the underlying mechanism.
Twelve-week-old C57BL/6J mice subject to injury-induced OA modeling were randomized into different diet groups in which the mice were fed a diet with daily recommended magnesium content (500 mg/kg) or diets with low magnesium content (100 or 300 mg/kg). Articular cartilage damage was evaluated using the OARSI score. To determine molecular mechanisms in vitro, mouse chondrocytes were treated with media of low magnesium conditions at 0.1 and 0.4 mM, compared with normal magnesium condition at 0.7 mM as control. Anabolic and catabolic factors, autophagy markers, β-catenin, Wnt ligands, and a magnesium channel transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily member 7 (TRPM7) were analyzed by quantitative real-time PCR and immunoblotting. Autolysosomes were detected by DALGreen staining via fluorescence microscopy and autophagosomes were evaluated by transmission electron microscopy. Autophagy markers, β-catenin, and TRPM7 were assessed in vivo in the mouse cartilage, comparing between dietary magnesium deficiency and normal diet, by immunohistochemistry.
Dietary magnesium deficiency aggravated injury-induced cartilage damage, indicated by significant higher OARSI scores. Autophagy markers LC3-II and Beclin-1 were decreased both in low magnesium diet-fed mice and low magnesium-treated chondrocytes. The number of autolysosomes and autophagosomes was also reduced under low magnesium conditions. Moreover, magnesium deficiency induced decreased anabolic and increased catabolic effect of chondrocytes which could be restored by autophagy activator rapamycin. In addition, reduced autophagy under low magnesium conditions is mediated by activated Wnt/β-catenin signaling. The expression of TRPM7 also decreased in low magnesium diet-fed mice, indicating that downstream changes could be regulated through this channel.
Dietary magnesium deficiency contributes to OA development, which is mediated by reduced autophagy through Wnt/β-catenin signaling activation. These findings indicated potential benefits of adequate dietary magnesium for OA patients or those individuals at high risk of OA.
现代饮食中普遍存在的膳食镁缺乏与骨关节炎(OA)易感性有关。尽管存在这种临床关联,但尚无研究表明膳食镁缺乏是否会加速 OA 的发展,尤其是在分子水平上。本研究旨在探讨膳食镁缺乏对损伤诱导的 OA 模型中软骨损伤的加重作用,并确定其潜在机制。
12 周龄 C57BL/6J 小鼠接受损伤诱导的 OA 模型造模后,随机分为不同饮食组,其中小鼠分别喂食含有每日推荐镁含量(500mg/kg)的饮食或低镁含量(100 或 300mg/kg)的饮食。采用 OARSI 评分评估关节软骨损伤。为了在体外确定分子机制,将小鼠软骨细胞分别用低镁条件下的培养基(0.1 和 0.4mM)与正常镁条件下的培养基(0.7mM)处理,作为对照。通过定量实时 PCR 和免疫印迹分析合成代谢和分解代谢因子、自噬标记物、β-连环蛋白、Wnt 配体和镁通道瞬时受体电位阳离子通道亚家族成员 7(TRPM7)。通过荧光显微镜用 DALGreen 染色检测自溶酶体,并通过透射电子显微镜评估自噬体。通过免疫组织化学法比较膳食镁缺乏与正常饮食时,体内小鼠软骨中的自噬标记物、β-连环蛋白和 TRPM7。
膳食镁缺乏加重了损伤诱导的软骨损伤,OARSI 评分明显更高。低镁饮食喂养的小鼠和低镁处理的软骨细胞中自噬标记物 LC3-II 和 Beclin-1 均减少。在低镁条件下,自溶酶体和自噬体的数量也减少。此外,低镁条件下的镁缺乏诱导软骨细胞的合成代谢减少和分解代谢增加,这种作用可以通过自噬激活剂雷帕霉素来恢复。此外,低镁条件下的自噬减少是通过激活的 Wnt/β-连环蛋白信号转导介导的。低镁饮食喂养的小鼠中 TRPM7 的表达也减少,表明下游变化可以通过该通道调节。
膳食镁缺乏导致 OA 发展,这是通过 Wnt/β-连环蛋白信号转导激活减少自噬介导的。这些发现表明,对于 OA 患者或 OA 高危人群,充足的膳食镁可能具有潜在益处。