Following CNS injury, astrocytes become “reactive” and exhibit pro-regenerative or harmful properties. However, the molecular mechanisms that cause astrocytes to adopt either phenotype are not well understood. Transglutaminase 2 (TG2) plays a key role in regulating the response of astrocytes to insults. Here, we used mice in which TG2 was specifically deleted in astrocytes (Gfap-Cre+/− TG2fl/fl, referred to here as TG2-A-cKO) in a spinal cord contusion injury (SCI) model. Deletion of TG2 from astrocytes resulted in a significant improvement in motor function following SCI. GFAP and NG2 immunoreactivity, as well as number of SOX9 positive cells, were significantly reduced in TG2-A-cKO mice. RNA-seq analysis of spinal cords from TG2-A-cKO and control mice 3 days post-injury identified thirty-seven differentially expressed genes, all of which were increased in TG2-A-cKO mice. Pathway analysis revealed a prevalence for fatty acid metabolism, lipid storage and energy pathways, which play essential roles in neuron–astrocyte metabolic coupling. Excitingly, treatment of wild type mice with the selective TG2 inhibitor VA4 significantly improved functional recovery after SCI, similar to what was observed using the genetic model. These findings indicate the use of TG2 inhibitors as a novel strategy for the treatment of SCI and other CNS injuries.
Following CNS injury astrocytes become reactive and exhibit pro-regenerative or harmful properties. However, the molecular mechanisms that cause astrocytes to adopt either phenotype are not well understood. Transglutaminase 2 (TG2) plays a key role in regulating the response of astrocytes to insults. Here we used mice in which TG2 was specifically deleted in astrocytes (Gfap-Cre+/- TG2fl/fl, referred to here as TG2-A-cKO) in a spinal cord contusion injury (SCI) model. Deletion of TG2 from astrocytes resulted in a significant improvement in motor function following SCI. GFAP and NG2 immunoreactivity, as well as number of SOX9 positive cells, were significantly reduced in TG2-A-cKO mice. RNA-seq analysis of spinal cords from TG2-A-cKO and control mice 3 days postinjury identified thirty-seven differentially expressed genes, all of which were increased in TG2-A-cKO mice. Pathway analysis reveals a prevalence for fatty acid metabolism, lipid storage and energy pathways, which play essential roles in neuron-astrocyte metabolic coupling. Excitingly, treatment of wild type mice with the selective TG2 inhibitor VA4 significantly improved functional recovery after SCI, similar to what was observed using the genetic model. These findings indicate the use of TG2 inhibitors as a novel strategy for the treatment of SCI and other CNS injuries.
Objective: The objective of this study is to understand the role of altered in vivo mechanical environments in knee joints post anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)-injury in chondrocyte vulnerability against mechanical stimuli and in the progression of post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PT-OA). Methods: Differential in vivo mechanical environments were induced by unilateral ACL-injury (uni-ACL-I) and bilateral ACL-injury (bi-ACL-I) in 8-week-old female C57BL/6 mice. The gait parameters, the mechano-vulnerability of in situ chondrocytes, Youngs moduli of cartilage extracellular matrix (ECM), and the histological assessment of OA severity (OARSI score) were compared between control and experimental groups at 0~8-weeks post-ACL-injury. Results: We found that bi-ACL-I mice experience higher joint-loading on their both injured limbs, but uni-ACL-I mice balance their joint-loading between injured and uninjured hind limbs resulting in a reduced joint-loading during gait. We also found that at 4- and 8-week post-injury the higher weight-bearing hind limbs (i.e., bi-ACL-I) had the increased area of chondrocyte death induced by impact loading and higher OARSI score than the lower weight-bearing limbs (uni-ACL-I). Additionally, we found that at 8-weeks post-injury the ECM became stiffer in bi-ACL-I joints and softer in uni-ACL-I joints. Conclusions: Our results show that ACL-injured limbs with lower in vivo joint-loading develops PT-OA significantly slower than injured limbs with higher joint-loading during gait. Our data also indicate that articular chondrocytes in severe PT-OA are more fragile from mechanical impacts than chondrocytes in healthy or mild PT-OA. Thus, preserving physiologic joint-loads on injured joints will reduce chondrocyte death post-injury and may delay PT-OA progression.
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