Osteoarthritis affects 15% of people over 65 years of age. It is characterized by articular cartilage degradation and inflammation, leading to joint pain and disability. Osteoarthritis is incurable and the patients may eventually need joint replacement. An emerging treatment is mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs), with over two hundred clinical trials being registered. However, the outcomes of these trials have fallen short of the expectation, due to heterogeneity of MSCs and uncertain mechanisms of action. It is generally believed that MSCs exert their function mainly by secreting immunomodulatory and trophic factors. Here we used knee osteoarthritis mouse model to assess the therapeutic effects of MSCs isolated from the white adipose or dermal adipose tissue of Prrx1-Cre; R26 tdTomato mice and Dermo1-Cre; R26 tdTomato mice. We found that the Prrx1-lineage MSCs from the white adipose tissues showed the greatest in vitro differentiation potentials among the four MSC groups and single cell profiling showed that the Prrx1-lineage MSCs contained more stem cells than the Dermo1 counterpart. Only the Prrx1-lineage cells isolated from white adipose tissues showed long-term therapeutic effectiveness on early-stage osteoarthritis models. Mechanistically, Prrx1-lineage MSCs differentiated into Col2 + chondrocytes and replaced the damage cartilage, activated Col1 expressing in resident chondrocytes, and inhibited synovial inflammation. Transcriptome analysis showed that the articular chondrocytes derived from injected MSCs expressed immunomodulatory cytokines, trophic factors, and chondrocyte-specific genes. Our study identified a MSC population genetically marked by Prrx1 that has great multipotentiality and can differentiate into chondrocytes to replace the damaged cartilage.
Keyphrases
- mesenchymal stem cells
- single cell
- knee osteoarthritis
- umbilical cord
- adipose tissue
- stem cells
- bone marrow
- rna seq
- early stage
- extracellular matrix
- rheumatoid arthritis
- oxidative stress
- insulin resistance
- clinical trial
- mouse model
- end stage renal disease
- cell therapy
- high throughput
- multiple sclerosis
- chronic pain
- gene expression
- induced apoptosis
- systematic review
- randomized controlled trial
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- cell fate
- high fat diet induced
- ejection fraction
- spinal cord injury
- peritoneal dialysis
- study protocol
- replacement therapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell proliferation
- radiation therapy
- patient reported outcomes
- cell cycle arrest
- neuropathic pain
- spinal cord
- wound healing
- weight loss