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Owing to population aging, the social impact of osteoarthritis (OA)-the most common musculoskeletal disease-is expected to increase dramatically. Yet, therapy is still limited to palliative treatments or surgical intervention, and disease-modifying OA (DMOA) drugs are scarce, mainly because of the absence of relevant preclinical OA models. Therefore, in vitro models that can reliably predict the efficacy of DMOA drugs are needed. Here, we show, using a newly developed microphysiological cartilage-on-a-chip model that enables the application of strain-controlled compression to three-dimensional articular cartilage microtissue, that a 30% confined compression recapitulates the mechanical factors involved in OA pathogenesis and is sufficient to induce OA traits. Such hyperphysiological compression triggers a shift in cartilage homeostasis towards catabolism and inflammation, hypertrophy, and the acquisition of a gene expression profile akin to those seen in clinical osteoarthritic tissue. The cartilage on-a-chip model may enable the screening of DMOA candidates.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1038/s41551-019-0406-3

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2019-07-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

3

Pages

545 - 557

Total pages

12

Keywords

Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Antirheumatic Agents, Cartilage, Articular, Cell Culture Techniques, Cellular Microenvironment, Collagen Type I, Collagen Type I, alpha 1 Chain, Collagen Type II, Collagen Type X, Compressive Strength, Cytokines, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Expression Regulation, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Inflammation, Lab-On-A-Chip Devices, Male, Matrix Metalloproteinase 13, Middle Aged, Osteoarthritis, Phenotype, Stress, Mechanical, Transcriptome