PD Dr. Frank Schildberg
Clinic for Orthopedics and Trauma Surgery
Frank.Schildberg@ukbonn.de View member: PD Dr. Frank Schildberg
International journal of molecular sciences
Inflammation models are widely used in the in vitro investigation of new therapeutic approaches for osteoarthritis. TNFα (tumor necrosis factor alpha) plays an important role in the inflammatory process. Current inflammation models lack uniformity and make comparisons difficult. Therefore, this study aimed to systematically investigate whether the effects of TNFα are concentration-dependent and whether chondrocyte expansion has an effect on the inflammatory model. Bovine chondrocytes were enzymatically isolated, expanded to passages 1-3, and transferred into a 3D pellet culture. Chondrocyte pellets were stimulated with recombinant bovine TNFα at different concentrations for 48 h to induce inflammation. Gene expression of anabolic (, , ()), catabolic (matrix metalloproteinases (, )), dedifferentiation () markers, inflammation markers ( (), (), (), ()), and the apoptosis marker was determined. At the protein level, concentrations of IL-6, nitric oxide (NO), and sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAG) were evaluated. Statistical analysis was performed using the independent t-test, and significance was defined as < 0.05. In general, TNFα caused a decrease in anabolic markers and an increase in the expression of catabolic and inflammatory markers. There was a concentration-dependent threshold of 10 ng/mL to induce significant inflammatory effects. Most of the markers analyzed showed TNFα concentration-dependent effects (, , , , , and ). There was a statistical influence of selected gene expression markers from different passages on the TNFα chondrocyte inflammation model, including , , , , and . Considering the expression of and , passage 3 chondrocytes showed a higher sensitivity to TNFα stimulation compared to passages 1 and 2. On the other hand, , , and gene expression were lower in P3 chondrocytes compared to the other passages. On the protein level, inflammatory effects showed a similar pattern, with cytokine effects starting at 10 ng/mL and differences between the passages. TNFα had a detrimental effect on cartilage, with a clear threshold observed at 10 ng/mL. Although TNFα effects showed concentration-dependent patterns, this was not consistent for all markers. The selected passage showed a clear influence, especially on inflammation markers. Further experiments were warranted to explore the effects of TNFα concentration and passage in long-term stimulation.
PMID: 39273085
Clinic for Orthopedics and Trauma Surgery
Frank.Schildberg@ukbonn.de View member: PD Dr. Frank Schildberg