[HTML][HTML] Catabolic cytokines disrupt the circadian clock and the expression of clock-controlled genes in cartilage via an NFкB-dependent pathway

B Guo, N Yang, E Borysiewicz, M Dudek… - Osteoarthritis and …, 2015 - Elsevier
B Guo, N Yang, E Borysiewicz, M Dudek, JL Williams, J Li, ES Maywood, A Adamson
Osteoarthritis and cartilage, 2015Elsevier
Objective To define how the catabolic cytokines (Interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis
factor alpha (TNFα)) affect the circadian clock mechanism and the expression of clock-
controlled catabolic genes within cartilage, and to identify the downstream pathways linking
the cytokines to the molecular clock within chondrocytes. Methods Ex vivo cartilage explants
were isolated from the Cry1-luc or PER2:: LUC clock reporter mice. Clock gene dynamics
were monitored in real-time by bioluminescence photon counting. Gene expression …
Objective
To define how the catabolic cytokines (Interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα)) affect the circadian clock mechanism and the expression of clock-controlled catabolic genes within cartilage, and to identify the downstream pathways linking the cytokines to the molecular clock within chondrocytes.
Methods
Ex vivo cartilage explants were isolated from the Cry1-luc or PER2::LUC clock reporter mice. Clock gene dynamics were monitored in real-time by bioluminescence photon counting. Gene expression changes were studied by qRT-PCR. Functional luc assays were used to study the function of the core Clock/BMAL1 complex in SW-1353 cells. NFкB pathway inhibitor and fluorescence live-imaging of cartilage were performed to study the underlying mechanisms.
Results
Exposure to IL-1β severely disrupted circadian gene expression rhythms in cartilage. This effect was reversed by an anti-inflammatory drug dexamethasone, but not by other clock synchronizing agents. Circadian disruption mediated by IL-1β was accompanied by disregulated expression of endogenous clock genes and clock-controlled catabolic pathways. Mechanistically, NFкB signalling was involved in the effect of IL-1β on the cartilage clock in part through functional interference with the core Clock/BMAL1 complex. In contrast, TNFα had little impact on the circadian rhythm and clock gene expression in cartilage.
Conclusion
In our experimental system (young healthy mouse cartilage), we demonstrate that IL-1β (but not TNFα) abolishes circadian rhythms in Cry1-luc and PER2::LUC gene expression. These data implicate disruption of the chondrocyte clock as a novel aspect of the catabolic responses of cartilage to pro-inflammatory cytokines, and provide an additional mechanism for how chronic joint inflammation may contribute to osteoarthritis (OA).
Elsevier