A Damaging COL6A3 Variant Alters the MIR31HG‐Regulated Response of Chondrocytes in Neocartilage Organoids to Hyperphysiologic Mechanical Loading

Author:

Bloks Niek GC1ORCID,Harissa Zainab23,Mazzini Giorgia1,Adkar Shaunak S23,Dicks Amanda R23,Hajmousa Ghazaleh1,Steward Nancy23,Koning Roman I.1,Mulder Aat1,de Koning Berend B.R.1,Kloppenburg Margreet1,de Almeida Rodrigo Coutinho1,Ramos Yolande FM1,Guilak Farshid23,Meulenbelt Ingrid1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Leiden University Medical Center Leiden 2333 ZC The Netherlands

2. Washington University Saint Louis MO 63110 USA

3. Shriners Hospitals for Children Saint Louis MO 63110 USA

Abstract

AbstractThe pericellular matrix (PCM), with its hallmark proteins collagen type VI (COLVI) and fibronectin (FN), surrounds chondrocytes and is critical in transducing the biomechanical cues. To identify genetic variants that change protein function, exome sequencing is performed in a patient with symptomatic OA at multiple joint sites. A predicted damaging variant in COL6A3 is identified and introduced by CRISPR‐Cas9 genome engineering in two established human induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived in‐vitro neocartilage organoid models. The downstream effects of the COL6A3 variant on the chondrocyte phenotypic state are studied by a multi‐omics (mRNA and lncRNA) approach in interaction with hyper‐physiological mechanical loading conditions. The damaging variant in COL6A3 results in significantly lower binding between the PCM proteins COLVI and FN and provokes an osteoarthritic chondrocyte state. By subsequently exposing the neocartilage organoids to hyperphysiological mechanical stress, it is demonstrated that the COL6A3 variant in chondrocytes abolishes the characteristic inflammatory signaling response after mechanical loading with PTGS2, PECAM1, and ADAMTS5, as central genes. Finally, by integrating epigenetic regulation, the lncRNA MIR31HG is identified as key regulator of the characteristic inflammatory signaling response to mechanical loading.

Funder

Dutch Arthritis Society

Shriners Hospitals for Children

National Institutes of Health

Leids Universitair Medisch Centrum

Publisher

Wiley

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