Intraarticular injection of liposomal adenosine reduces cartilage damage in established murine and rat models of osteoarthritis

Author:

Corciulo Carmen,Castro Cristina M.,Coughlin Thomas,Jacob Samson,Li Zhu,Fenyö David,Rifkin Daniel B.,Kennedy Oran D.,Cronstein Bruce Neil

Abstract

AbstractOsteoarthritis (OA) affects nearly 10% of the population of the United States and other industrialized countries and, at present, short of surgical joint replacement, there is no therapy available that can reverse the progression of the disease. Adenosine, acting at its A2A receptor (A2AR), is a critical autocrine factor for maintenance of cartilage homeostasis and here we report that injection of liposomal suspensions of either adenosine or a selective A2AR agonist, CGS21680, significantly reduced OA cartilage damage in a murine model of obesity-induced OA. The same treatment also improved swelling and preserved cartilage in the affected knees in a rat model of established post-traumatic OA (PTOA). Differential expression analysis of mRNA from chondrocytes harvested from knees of rats with PTOA treated with liposomal A2AR agonist revealed downregulation of genes associated with matrix degradation and upregulation of genes associated with cell proliferation as compared to liposomes alone. Studies in vitro and in affected joints demonstrated that A2AR ligation increased the nuclear P-SMAD2/3/P-SMAD1/5/8 ratio, a change associated with repression of terminal chondrocyte differentiation. These results strongly suggest that targeting the A2AR is an effective approach to treat OA.

Funder

Arthritis Foundation

NYU School of Medicine Applied Research Support Fund

NIH

NYU-HHC Clinical and Translational Science Institute

Translational Research Laboratory Instruments at NYU-Langone Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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