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Publication : Interferon-gamma signaling promotes cartilage regeneration after injury.

First Author  Kim JR Year  2024
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  14
Issue  1 Pages  8046
PubMed ID  38580748 Mgi Jnum  J:348973
Mgi Id  MGI:7619449 Doi  10.1038/s41598-024-58779-0
Citation  Kim JR, et al. (2024) Interferon-gamma signaling promotes cartilage regeneration after injury. Sci Rep 14(1):8046
abstractText  Osteoarthritis is a common chronic disease and major cause of disability and chronic pain in ageing populations. In this pathology, the entire joint is involved, and the regeneration of articular cartilage still remains one of the main challenges. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying cartilage regeneration in young mice using a full-thickness cartilage injury (FTCI) model. FTCI-induced cartilage defects were created in the femoral trochlea of young and adult C57BL/6 mice. To identify key molecules and pathways involved in the early response to cartilage injury, we performed RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis of cartilage RNA at 3 days after injury. Young mice showed superior cartilage regeneration compared to adult mice after cartilage injury. RNA-seq analysis revealed significant upregulation of genes associated with the immune response, particularly in the IFN-gamma signaling pathway and qRT-PCR analysis showed macrophage polarization in the early phase of cartilage regeneration (3 days) in young mice after injury, which might promote the removal of damaged or necrotic cells and initiate cartilage regeneration in response to injury. IFN-gammaR1- and IFN-gamma-deficient mice exhibited impaired cartilage regeneration following cartilage injury. DMM-induced and spontaneous OA phenotypes were exacerbated in IFN-gammaR1(-/-) mice than in wild-type mice. Our data support the hypothesis that IFN-gamma signaling is necessary for cartilage regeneration, as well as for the amelioration of post-traumatic and age-induced OA.
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