| Literature DB >> 22280251 |
Daliborka Dusanic1, Dusan Bencina, Irena Oven, Ivanka Cizelj, Mojca Bencina, Mojca Narat.
Abstract
The role of chondrocytes in the development of infectious arthritis is not well understood. Several examples of mycoplasma-induced arthritis in animals indicate that chondrocytes come into direct contact with bacteria. The objective of this study was to analyze the interaction of an arthrogenic Mycoplasma synoviae strain WVU 1853 with chicken chondrocytes. We found that M. synoviae significantly reduces chondrocyte respiration. This was accompanied by alterations in chondrocyte morphology, namely cell shrinkage and cytoplasm condensation, as well as nuclear condensation and formation of plasma membrane invaginations containing nuclear material, which appeared to cleave off the cell surface. In concordance with these apoptosis-like events in chondrocytes, transcription was increased in several pro-apoptotic genes. Twenty-four hours after infection, strong upregulation was assayed in NOS2, Mapk11, CASP8 and Casp3 genes. Twenty-four and 72 h incubation of chondrocytes with M. synoviae induced upregulation of AIFM1, NFκB1, htrA3 and BCL2. Casp3 and NOS2 remained upregulated, but upregulation ceased for Mapk11 and CASP8 genes. Increased production of nitric oxide was also confirmed in cell supernates. The data suggests that chicken chondrocytes infected with M. synoviae die by apoptosis involving production of nitric oxide, caspase 3 activation and mitochondrial inactivation. The results of this study show for the first time that mycoplasmas could cause chondrocyte apoptosis. This could contribute to tissue destruction and influence the development of arthritic conditions. Hence, the study gives new insights into the role of mycoplasma infection on chondrocyte biology and development of infectious arthritis in chickens and potentially in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22280251 PMCID: PMC3293721 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9716-43-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Mycoplasma species with reported roles in apoptosis modulation.
| Host species | Disease(s) | Apoptosis modulation mechanism | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| swine | Polyserositis, otitis media, arthritis, pneumonia | Induces apoptosis in human carcinoma cell line AZ-521 by activation of NOS2 and caspase 3. | [ | |
| cattle | Chronic unresponsive pneumonia, systemic infection, mastitis, arthritis | Inhibits proliferation without apoptosis or effect on function of lymphocytes and peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Induces apoptosis of bovine lymphocytes. | [ | |
| humans, mice | Possible role in arthritis (found in patients) | Reduces TNF-induced apoptosis upstream of caspase 8 in a myelomonocitic cell line. Prevents apoptosis of 32D cells by inducing | [ | |
| alligators | Acute lethal cardiopulmonary disease | Promotes | [ | |
| humans | Possible role in arthritis (found in patients) | Induces cell death in HeLa cells (through ATP release) and in 32D cells. | [ | |
| humans | Possible role in arthritis (found in patients) | Mediates NFκB activation in mouse macrophages and induces apoptosis. | [ | |
| humans, rodents, camels, sheep, pigs | Pneumonia, chronic respiratory disease, otitis | Inhibits apoptosis of cells expressing toll-like receptors 2/6 by inducing constitutive NFkB activation and p53 suppression. | [ | |
| humans | Urethritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, pneumonia, arthritis | Does not affect 32D cells. Induces apoptosis in human monocytes THP-1 by activating NFκB. | [ | |
| humans | Atypical pneumonia, possible role in arthritis | Supports continous growth of 32D cells. | [ | |
A list of oligonucleotides used as primers in RT-qPCR analysis of gene expression in chicken chondrocytes.
| Gene symbol | RefSeq mRNA number | Forward primers | Reverse primers | Amplicon lenght | Reference | Encoded protein function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NM_204725.1 | TGGCCCTCTTGAACTGAAAG | TCCACTGTCTGCTTCAATACC | 139 | IDT1 | ||
| NM_001030920.1 | GCCCTGCTGGGTTTCGGTAA | AATTCGGTGACGTAGCGGGC | 95 | NCBI2 | ||
| XM_421659.2 | CCTGCTCCTCATCATTGTGT | TGATCCATGTACTCCTCTCC | 258 | [ | ||
| NM_001031559.1 | GGAGAAGGAACTGGCTGAAC | GGTTTCCTGTTAAGTGTGCTG | 134 | IDT1 | ||
| NM_205264.1 | ACCTGCACTTACTCCCCGGT | TCTTATAGACGGCCACGGCG | 127 | NCBI2 | ||
| NM_001007490.1 | GAAGTACAACAACGGCTGAC | GAGACAGAGACAGACTTGAC | 299 | IDT1 | ||
| NM_204592.2 | GGACAGGACTGAGCTGGCGT | AGGTCCCCCACCTCGATCATC | 135 | NCBI2 | ||
| NM_205339 | GATGACCGAGTACCTGAACC | CAGGAGAAATCGAACAAAGGC | 114 | IDT1 | ||
| XM_415487.2 | GAACAACGTGGCCGTCCCT | GGGCATCACATAGGAGCGCA | 91 | NCBI2 | ||
| NM_204588.1 | GCAGAATATGAGAGGCGGATAC | TCCTTCCACTCTTGCAATCC | 149 | IDT1 | ||
| NM_204961.1 | GCATTCTTATTGGCCCAGGA | CATAGAGACGCTGCTGCCAG | 66 | IDT1 | ||
| NM_205134.1 | AGGACTTAAAATGGCAGGAGAG | GCTGTTCGTAGTGGTAAGTCTG | 141 | IDT1 | ||
| NM_204860.2 | AGCACTGGTCTTTACTGGAAC | TCTGAGCAACTTGGGAAACTG | 93 | IDT1 | ||
| XM_420813.2 | CCTCCCGCGGCTTCGTATTC | TGCAGTCGCGGTGCAGTAAG | 116 | NCBI2 | ||
| NM_001006227.1 | GCGGCTCCGCTAAAATGCCG | GGGGTGAGGTTCTGGTAGCGC | 97 | NCBI2 | ||
| NM_204305.1 | ATGGCATCCAAGGAGTGAGC | AACAAAGGGTCCTGCTTCCC | 66 | [ | ||
1 Designed in Integrated DNA Technologies PrimerQuestSM application 2 Designed in NCBI Primer-BLAST application
Figure 1Cell respiration (viability) of control cells, cells treated with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or infected with . CCH or Jurkat cells were treated for indicated time periods and assayed using the XTT-based cell viability test. The results are presented as mean values ± standard error for three independent experiments with three replicates each. Means with a different letter are different (p < 0.05 to p < 0.001) by the Student t-test.
Figure 2Cytopathological changes in control CCH, CCH treated with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or infected with . CCH were seeded onto cover slides and incubated overnight followed by treatment with 5-FU or infection with M. synoviae and incubation for 24 h, 48 h and 72 h. In each timepoint, cells were observed for morphological changes by phase contrast microscopy (400 × magnification). Typical examples of chondrocyte morphology after infection with M. synoviae are shown in magnification. Vacuolization and indications of membrane blebbing are indicated by arrows.
Figure 3Morphological and other changes in untreated CCH, CCH treated with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or infected with . CCH were seeded onto cover slides and incubated overnight. Cells were then treated with 5-FU or infected with M. synoviae and incubated for 24 h, 48 h and 72 h followed by fixation in an acetone-methanol mixture, blocking and labeling with mouse antibodies to chicken CD44. Alexafluor-488 goat antibodies to mouse IgG were used as secondary antibodies and nuclei were labeled with propidium iodide. Nuclear condensation and formation of blebs containing nuclear material are indicated by arrows.
Figure 4Expression of selected genes after exposure of CCH to 5-fluorouracil or . Exposure agent and time of exposure (in hours) are indicated below columns. Control (CTRL) represents in all graphs non-exposed CCH. The results are given as mean values ± standard error for three independent cell treatment experiments with three RT-qPCR replicates for each experiment. Means marked with stars are significantly different from controls (p < 0.05 to p < 0.001) by Student t-test.
Figure 5Ingenuity Pathway Analysis network depicting interactions between genes known to be involved in apoptosis induction. Two major pathways are shown, the death receptor (extrinsic) pathway, and mitochondria-dependent (intrinsic) pathway. Pink color of molecules indicates upregulation of genes analyzed in this study (level of upregulation after 24, 48 or 72 h of CCH exposure to M. synoviae), with darker shades of pink representing higher levels of gene upregulation. Grey color indicates no change in gene expression, whereas molecules that were not analyzed are white. Types of relationships are explained in the legend. The pathways depicted represent conserved pathways generated from knowledge published for different species. (Note that exceptions specific for avian species could be possible).
Figure 6Concentration of NO in culture media of CCH infected with . NO concentration was determined by the Griess assay. The results are presented as mean concentrations ± standard error for two independent experiments with three replicates each. Different letters above columns indicate significant differences between NO concentrations (Student t-test, p ≤ 0.01).