Catabolic cytokines disrupt the circadian clock and the expression of clock-controlled genes in cartilage via an NFкB-dependent pathway.

Guo B., Yang N., Borysiewicz E., Dudek M., Williams JL., Li J., Maywood ES., Adamson A., Hastings MH., Bateman JF., White MRH., Boot-Handford RP., Meng QJ.

OBJECTIVE: To define how the catabolic cytokines (Interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα)) affect the circadian clock mechanism and the expression of clock-controlled catabolic genes within cartilage, and to identify the downstream pathways linking the cytokines to the molecular clock within chondrocytes. METHODS: Ex vivo cartilage explants were isolated from the Cry1-luc or PER2::LUC clock reporter mice. Clock gene dynamics were monitored in real-time by bioluminescence photon counting. Gene expression changes were studied by qRT-PCR. Functional luc assays were used to study the function of the core Clock/BMAL1 complex in SW-1353 cells. NFкB pathway inhibitor and fluorescence live-imaging of cartilage were performed to study the underlying mechanisms. RESULTS: Exposure to IL-1β severely disrupted circadian gene expression rhythms in cartilage. This effect was reversed by an anti-inflammatory drug dexamethasone, but not by other clock synchronizing agents. Circadian disruption mediated by IL-1β was accompanied by disregulated expression of endogenous clock genes and clock-controlled catabolic pathways. Mechanistically, NFкB signalling was involved in the effect of IL-1β on the cartilage clock in part through functional interference with the core Clock/BMAL1 complex. In contrast, TNFα had little impact on the circadian rhythm and clock gene expression in cartilage. CONCLUSION: In our experimental system (young healthy mouse cartilage), we demonstrate that IL-1β (but not TNFα) abolishes circadian rhythms in Cry1-luc and PER2::LUC gene expression. These data implicate disruption of the chondrocyte clock as a novel aspect of the catabolic responses of cartilage to pro-inflammatory cytokines, and provide an additional mechanism for how chronic joint inflammation may contribute to osteoarthritis (OA).

DOI

10.1016/j.joca.2015.02.020

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2015-11-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

23

Pages

1981 - 1988

Total pages

7

Keywords

Cartilage, Circadian clock, Cytokine, Inflammation, Osteoarthritis, Animals, Cartilage, Articular, Cells, Cultured, Chondrocytes, Circadian Clocks, Cytokines, DNA, Disease Models, Animal, Gene Expression Regulation, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, NF-kappa B, Osteoarthritis, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction

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