作者
Fane Kong,Peng Xia,Yi Shi,Ziqi Ye,Xiao Zhang,Changjun Yu,Kai Cheng,Xueping Li
摘要
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can treat osteoarthritis (OA), but their therapeutic efficacy is poor to date due to low migration efficiency. This study aimed to determine whether ultrasound-targeted microbubble destruction (UTMD) could ameliorate cartilage repair efficiency through facilitating the migration of MSCs via hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α)-mediated glycolysis regulatory pathway in OA model rats. OA rats were treated with MSCs alone or in combination with UTMD, respectively, for 4 weeks. Cartilage histopathology, MSCs migration efficiency, von Frey fiber thresholds, and the expression levels of collagen II and MMP-13 were measured. Further, MSCs were extracted from the bone marrow of rats, cocultured with osteoarthritic chondrocytes, transfected to siRNA-HIF-1α, and subjected to UTMD for 4 days. Glucose consumption, lactate production, and cell migration efficiency were assessed. The protein expression levels of HIF-1α, HK2, PKM2, and GLUT1 were measured, respectively. In OA rat model, NC-MSCs + UTMD improved migration efficiency, increased collagen II expression, decreased MMP-13 expression, and delayed osteoarthritis progression. Silencing HIF-1α attenuated the effects induced by UTMD. In vitro, UTMD led to increases in MSC activity and migration, glucose consumption, lactate production, and the protein expression of HIF-1α, HK2, PKM2, and GLUT1 expression, all of which were reversed upon HIF-1α silencing. UTMD enhances MSCs migration and improves cartilage repair efficiency through the HIF-1α-mediated glycolytic regulatory pathway, providing a novel therapy strategy for knee osteoarthritis.