DOI: 10.1177/19476035231194771 ISSN:

Il-1β Promotes Superficial Zone Cells Senescence in Articular Cartilage by Inhibiting Autophagy

Wei Xu, Juan Wang, Lin Cui, Chen Huang, Ning Xia, Meiming Xie, Da Liu, Dongfa Liao
  • Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation
  • Biomedical Engineering
  • Immunology and Allergy

Objective

The superficial zone cells in articular cartilage (SFZCs) have been identified as stem/progenitor chondrocytes and promoted cell self-renewal in the osteoarthritis (OA). Several studies emphasized the involvement of senescence and autophagy in OA. Interleukin-1β (IL-1β) is one of the main inflammatory mediators of OA, and whether it induces senescence and autophagy in SFZCs remains unclear. The present study aimed to investigate autophagy flux, mitochondrial function, and intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) that resulted in senescence in SFZCs induced by IL-1β.

Methods

Using western blotting, reverse transcription-quantitative PCR, immunofluorescence, intracellular ROS detection, mitochondrial staining, and determination of mitochondrial membrane potential, we tested senescence and autophagy markers in SFZCs induced by IL-1β in vitro. The consequences of mitochondrial function and ROS were also studied with IL-1β-induced senescence.

Results

IL-1β treatment decreased SFZC proliferation, induced SFZC senescence, and reduced SFZCs’ chondrogenic differentiation capacity. Moreover, IL-1β impaired autophagy flux, and the autophagy activator, rapamycin, attenuated the senescence of SFZCs. IL-1β-induced autophagy defect resulted in mitochondrial dysfunction and overproduction of ROS, and autophagy activation notably protected against mitochondrial dysfunction and reduced the levels of ROS. Moreover, antioxidant N-acetylcysteine reversed the senescence of IL-1β in SFZCs.

Conclusion

IL-1β promotes autophagy impairment and subsequently results in dysfunctional mitochondria and overproduction of ROS, which finally causes SFZC senescence.

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