| Literature DB >> 34914764 |
Emanuele Chisari1,2, Marjan Wouthuyzen-Bakker2, Alex W Friedrich2, Javad Parvizi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Along with mechanical and genetic factors, emerging evidence suggests that the presence of low-grade inflammation has a role in the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA) and seems to be related to the microbiome composition of the gut.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34914764 PMCID: PMC8675674 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1A PRISMA flowchart showing the selection process.
The main findings of the included studies.
| AUTHOR (DATE) [REFERENCE] | SUBJECTS NUMBER | SEX | Assessment of OA changes | MEAN AGE (STANDARD DEVIATION) | STUDY DESIGN | MAIN FINDINGS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boer CG. et al. (2019) [ | (n = 1427) humans | 57.5% female (n = 821). | WOMAC aKellgren-Lawrence radiographic OA severity scores | 56.9 (5.9) | population-based cohort study | A robust association between a greater abundance of |
| Collins KH. et al. (2015) [ | (n = 32) Sprague Dawley rats | male | Modified Mankin Criteria at sacrifice | 8–12 weeks | Increased OA in DIO animals is associated with greater body fat, not body mass. The link between gut microbiota and adiposity-derived inflammation and metabolic OA warrants further investigation | |
| Dunn CM. et al. (2020) [ | n = 75 humans (n = 34 Hip OA, n = 21 knee OA, n = 20 controls) n = 23 mice (n = 15 C57BL/6, n = 8 MRL/Mpj) | 38 women (18 Hip OA, 12 Knee OA and 8 controls) 23 male mice | OARSI score | Hip OA 65 (2) Knee 59 (2) Mice 11 weeks | observational study | Evidence of microbial nucleic acid signatures in human and mouse tissue: increase in gram negative constituents in OA compared to controls and demonstration that knee and hip are distinct both with or without OA |
| Huang ZY. et al. (2016) [ | (n = 25) humans | 18 women | Kellgren/Lawrence grade, OARSI score and WOMAC score | 62.4 (15.8) | population based cohort study | role of LPS in the pathogenesis and severity of structural abnormalities and symptoms of knee OA is strongly supported |
| Rios JL et al. (2019) [ | (n = 56) Sprague Dawley rats | male | Modified Mankin score and OARSI | 12-weeks | Prebiotic fiber supplementation, aerobic exercise, and the combination of the two interventions completely prevented knee joint damage that is otherwise observed in this rat model of obesity. | |
| Schott EM et al. (2018) [ | not specified | not specified | OARSI score and histomorphometric analysis using the OsteoMetrics system | 19 weeks | the OA of obesity is an inflammatory process driven by obesity-related dysbiosis of the gut microbiome that can be treated by restoring a healthy microbial community using the indigestible prebiotic fiber oligofructose | |
| Panicker S. et al. (2009) [ | (n = 20) C57BL/6 mice | female | Histological analysis in a papain injected mices | 10-week | Oral GlcN alters the physiology of the liver and mesenteric lymph nodes, which in turn, could indirectly alter the biology of the injured joint | |
| So JS. et al. (2011) [ | (n = 51) Wistar rats | female | The hind paw withdrawal threshold (PWT) and histological analysis | 6–8 weeks | evidence that L. casei could act as a potent nutraceutical modulator for OA treatment by reducing pain, inflammatory responses, and articular cartilage degradation | |
| Coulson S. et al. (2012) [ | (n = 38) humans | 29 female | WOMAC score and the SF-12 | 58.6 (8.9) | non blinded-randomized clinical trial | nutritional supplements such as GLM and GS may regulate some of the metabolic and immunological activities of the GIT microbiota |
| Ulici V. et al. (2018) [ | (n = 55) C57BL/6J mice (36 younger, 13 older, 6 dead) | male | ACS score and the safranin-O staining score | younger 13.5 weeks, older 43 weeks | Results suggest factors related to the gut microbiota promote the development of OA after joint injury. | |
| Guan et al.(2020) [ | (n = 54) C57BL/6N mices | 27 males | OARSI score, biomarkes measuraments, DXA, and CT-scan | All 8 weeks old | self-control experiment for the induction of OA, then multiple groups (6) based on sex and antibiotic administration or not | antibiotic-induced gut microbiota dysbiosis in OA male mice significantly decreased the relative abundance of Bacteroidetes, but for female mice, the relative abundance of Firmicutes was increased significantly compared with that in Con-OA female mic |
| 27 females | ||||||
| Hu X.H. (2021) [ | Data coming from the following publications | NA | DNA and RNA sequencing data | NA | Large cohort study based on previously published data | The study was able to identify several microbial taxa associated with joint OA in humans. This data can be used as reference and guide for future studies |
| Loeser R.F (2021) [ | Cases: 50 OA with obesity patients (KL>2) Control: 42 no OA with obesity patients | Cases: 43 Females and 7 males Controls: 26 Females and 16 males | 16s sequencing data, plasma LPS and LBP | Cases: 73.7 ± 6.9 Control: 70.8 ± 6.4 | Case-control | The lack of differences in the gut microbiota yet increased serum LPS levels suggest the possibility that increased intestinal permeability allowing for greater absorption of LPS may contribute to development of OA associated with obesity |
| Collins KH et al (2021) [ | Chow WT n = 22, Chow LD n = 15, HFD WT n = 17, HFD LD n = 8, MEF-R n = 15, WF-R n = 12 | NA | 16s sequencing data, plasma LPS | Start study at 6–8 weeks, surgery for destabilization of medial meniscus at 16 weeks, assessment at 28 weeks | Case-control | The lack of effect from transplant fat, suggest the presence of causal relationships the gut microbiome and cartilage health, independent of diet or adiposity |
| Huang ZY et al (2018) [ | 431 knee OA patients from the doxycycline (DOXY) trial | All female | Plasma lipopolysaccharide and lipopolysaccharide | 45–64 years | Secondary analysis of a clinical trial | Plasma LBP and sTLR4 were associated with knee OA progression over 16–18 months. |
| Huang ZY et al 2020 [ | human healthy controls (OA-METS-, n = 4), knee OA without metabolic syndrome (OA+METS-, n = 7) and knee OA with metabolic syndrome (OA+METS+, n = 9) | all female | Medical history, fecal 16s sequencing and blood samples ELISA assay for inflammatory biomarkers (G-CSF, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10, IL-17, IP-10, MCP-1 and MIP-1α) and the LPS detection | NA | Ex vivo study | Alterations of Fusobacterium, Faecalibaterium and Ruminococcaceae suggest a role of these particular microbes in exacerbating OA. |
| Chen J (2021) [ | 57 patients with OA and Sex-matched healthy control | All female | Shotgun metagenomics | 65.0 ± 7.7 years | Matched cohort study | Significant alterations in the gut microbial composition and function were observed between the older patients with OA and their controls |
| Wang Z (2021) [ | 182 stool samples from overweight OA patients (n = 86) and overweight normal people (n = 96) | Cases: 25 males and 61 females Control: Matched cohort | 16s sequencing of multiple stool samples | The mean age for the overweight OA patients (between 50 and 72 years of age, n = 25 males, n = 61 females) was 62 years. The mean age for the BMI matched healthy controls (between 50 and 76 years of age, n = 40 males, n = 56 females) was 64 years | Ex vivo matched case-control study | Analysis of the gut microbiome could serve as a non-invasive tool for overweight individuals to evaluate their risk for OA |
| Jhun JY (2021) [ | Wistar rats (n = 6) | Male:4 | RT-PCR, immunohistochemistry of ex-vivo cartilage | 6-week-old | Ex vivo study | L. rhamnosus treatment led to decreased pain severity and cartilage destruction in a rat model of OA |
| Female:2 |
OA: osteoarthritits; OARSI: Osteoarthritis Research Society International; HF: high fat; LPS: lipopolysaccaride; ACS: cartilage society score; WT:wild tipe; LD:lypodistrophic; MEF-R: LD mice who received a mouse embryonic fibroblast transplant; WF-R: mice who received wildtype fat transplant containing visceral and subcutaneous fat.
Fig 2The model of gut-joint axis.
FOS: fructooligosaccharides; LPS: lipopolysaccharide; OA: osteoarthritis. In the picture are described the three main actors of the gut-joint axis in OA development. Environmental factors act as either stressor or protectants of gut integrity and microbiota health. If this balance is disrupted, bacterial metabolites and byproducts such as LPS and chemokines pass the gut barrier into the blood flow causing distant damage to diarthrodial joints such as the knee. In the long-term, similar damage together with immune priming can initiative OA changes and affect pain and functionality.