Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Western University, London, ON, N6A 5B5, Canada.
Bone and Joint Institute, Western University, London, ON, N6A 5B5, Canada.
Arthritis Res Ther. 2024 Mar 20;26(1):73. doi: 10.1186/s13075-024-03309-6.
Pain from osteoarthritis (OA) is one of the top causes of disability worldwide, but effective treatment is lacking. Nociceptive factors are released by activated synovial macrophages in OA, but depletion of synovial macrophages paradoxically worsens inflammation and tissue damage in previous studies. Rather than depleting macrophages, we hypothesized that inhibiting macrophage activation may improve pain without increasing tissue damage. We aimed to identify key mechanisms mediating synovial macrophage activation and test the role of STAT signaling in macrophages on pain outcomes in experimental knee OA.
We induced experimental knee OA in rats via knee destabilization surgery, and performed RNA sequencing analysis on sorted synovial tissue macrophages to identify macrophage activation mechanisms. Liposomes laden with STAT1 or STAT6 inhibitors, vehicle (control), or clodronate (depletion control) were delivered selectively to synovial macrophages via serial intra-articular injections up to 12 weeks after OA induction. Treatment effects on knee and hindpaw mechanical pain sensitivity were measured during OA development, along with synovitis, cartilage damage, and synovial macrophage infiltration using histopathology and immunofluorescence. Lastly, crosstalk between drug-treated synovial tissue and articular chondrocytes was assessed in co-culture.
The majority of pathways identified by transcriptomic analyses in OA synovial macrophages involve STAT signaling. As expected, macrophage depletion reduced pain, but increased synovial tissue fibrosis and vascularization. In contrast, STAT6 inhibition in macrophages led to marked, sustained improvements in mechanical pain sensitivity and synovial inflammation without worsening synovial or cartilage pathology. During co-culture, STAT6 inhibitor-treated synovial tissue had minimal effects on healthy chondrocyte gene expression, whereas STAT1 inhibitor-treated synovium induced changes in numerous cartilage turnover-related genes.
These results suggest that STAT signaling is a major mediator of synovial macrophage activation in experimental knee OA. STAT6 may be a key mechanism mediating the release of nociceptive factors from macrophages and the development of mechanical pain sensitivity. Whereas therapeutic depletion of macrophages paradoxically increases inflammation and fibrosis, blocking STAT6-mediated synovial macrophage activation may be a novel strategy for OA-pain management without accelerating tissue damage.
骨关节炎(OA)引起的疼痛是全球导致残疾的首要原因之一,但目前缺乏有效的治疗方法。OA 中,激活的滑膜巨噬细胞释放伤害感受因子,但在之前的研究中,巨噬细胞耗竭反而会加重炎症和组织损伤。我们推测,与其耗竭巨噬细胞,不如抑制巨噬细胞活化,这样可能在不增加组织损伤的情况下改善疼痛。我们旨在确定介导滑膜巨噬细胞活化的关键机制,并研究 STAT 信号在实验性膝骨关节炎中对巨噬细胞疼痛结局的作用。
通过膝关节不稳手术诱导大鼠实验性膝骨关节炎,对分选的滑膜组织巨噬细胞进行 RNA 测序分析,以确定巨噬细胞活化机制。通过连续关节内注射,将负载 STAT1 或 STAT6 抑制剂的脂质体、载体(对照)或氯膦酸脂质体(耗竭对照)递送至滑膜巨噬细胞,直至 OA 诱导后 12 周。在 OA 发展过程中,通过测量膝关节和后爪机械性疼痛敏感性,以及组织病理学和免疫荧光评估滑膜炎、软骨损伤和滑膜巨噬细胞浸润,来评估治疗对膝关节和后爪机械性疼痛敏感性的影响。最后,在共培养中评估药物处理的滑膜组织和关节软骨细胞之间的串扰。
OA 滑膜巨噬细胞转录组分析鉴定的大多数通路都涉及 STAT 信号。如预期的那样,巨噬细胞耗竭减少了疼痛,但增加了滑膜组织纤维化和血管化。相比之下,巨噬细胞中 STAT6 抑制导致机械性疼痛敏感性显著且持续改善,而不会加重滑膜或软骨病理学。在共培养中,STAT6 抑制剂处理的滑膜组织对健康软骨细胞基因表达的影响最小,而 STAT1 抑制剂处理的滑膜则诱导了许多与软骨代谢相关基因的变化。
这些结果表明,STAT 信号是实验性膝骨关节炎滑膜巨噬细胞活化的主要介质。STAT6 可能是介导巨噬细胞释放伤害感受因子和机械性疼痛敏感性发展的关键机制。尽管巨噬细胞的治疗性耗竭反而会增加炎症和纤维化,但阻断 STAT6 介导的滑膜巨噬细胞活化可能是一种治疗 OA 疼痛的新策略,而不会加速组织损伤。