| Literature DB >> 32620156 |
Anand O Masson1,2, Roman J Krawetz3,4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Osteoarthritis (OA) is a prevalent musculoskeletal disease resulting in progressive degeneration of the hyaline articular cartilage within synovial joints. Current repair treatments for OA often result in poor quality tissue that is functionally ineffective compared to the hyaline cartilage and demonstrates increased failure rates post-treatment. Complicating efforts to improve clinical outcomes, animal models used in pre-clinical research show significant heterogeneity in their regenerative and degenerative responses associated with their species, age, genetic/epigenetic traits, and context of cartilage injury or disease. These can lead to variable outcomes when testing and validating novel therapeutic approaches for OA. Furthermore, it remains unclear whether protection against OA among different model systems is driven by inhibition of cartilage degeneration, enhancement of cartilage regeneration, or any combination thereof. MAIN TEXT: Understanding the mechanistic basis underlying this context-dependent duality is essential for the rational design of targeted cartilage repair and OA therapies. Here, we discuss some of the critical variables related to the cross-species paradigm of degenerative and regenerative abilities found in pre-clinical animal models, to highlight that a gradient of regenerative competence within cartilage may exist across species and even in the greater human population, and likely influences clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Cartilage; Chondroprotection; Osteoarthritis; Regeneration
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32620156 PMCID: PMC7334861 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-020-03363-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Factors influencing the regeneration and degeneration processes in cartilage. The roles of species, genetic and epigenetic traits, age, as well as the type and severity of the cartilage damage need to be considered in how this modulates the gradient of regenerative competence, homeostasis and tissue degeneration
Summary of most widely used osteoarthritis models and direct cartilage injury models with respect to their type/mode of action and most commonly employed species [40, 44, 79]
| CARTILAGE DEGENERATION | Osteoarthritis models | Commonly used species | ||
| Spontaneous | Aging | Naturally occurring | Guinea Pig, Mouse, Dog | |
| Genetic | Genetically modified | Mouse | ||
| Induced | Chemical | Collagenase | Mouse, Rat, Rabbit | |
| Sodium Monoiodoacetate (MIA) | ||||
| Diet-induced | Obesity/Metabolic syndrome | Mouse, Rat | ||
| Post-traumatic (non-invasive) | Cyclic tibial compression | Mouse, Rabbit, Dog | ||
| Intra-articular tibial fracture | ||||
| Post-traumatic (invasive/surgical) | Anterior cruciate ligament transection (ACLT) | Rat, Rabbit, Dog | ||
| Destabilization medial meniscus (DMM) | Mouse, Rat | |||
| Meniscectomy | Mouse, Rat, Rabbit, Dog, Goat | |||
| CARTILAGE REGENERATION | Cartilage Injury models | Commonly used species | ||
| Induced | Longitudinal full-thickness cartilage defect [ | Osteochondral/Chondral defect - trochlear groove | Mouse, Rabbit | |
| Full-thickness cartilage defect (FTCD) [ | Focal osteochondral defect - trochlear groove | Mouse, Rat, Rabbit, Dog, Horse | ||
Fig. 2Assumed outcomes based on three different possible scenarios using an osteoarthritic model of PTOA or a FTCD cartilage injury model. In the context of indirect cartilage damage (OA model), one can analyze whether the treatment of choice is capable of attenuating or preventing OA development and cartilage degeneration (i.e., chondroprotection) when compared to untreated controls. However, the endogenous regenerative potential of the strain or species might interfere with the assumed outcome. Conversely, when using a direct cartilage injury model, one can investigate the mechanism underlying the endogenous regenerative ability, as well as to infer the efficacy of treatment of interest in enhancing cartilage regeneration
Fig. 3Comprehensive view of the effect of targeted treatments in inhibiting cartilage degeneration) and enhancing cartilage regeneration. The power of the combined analysis in informing the outcome of targeted therapies for OA and cartilage injury is greater than the one provided by the models isolation