Differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model

Abstract Background Post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is a common and significant problem in equine athletes. It is a disease of the entire joint, with the synovium thought to be a key player in disease onset and progression due to its role in inflammation. The development of effective tools for...

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Main Authors: Annette M. McCoy, Ann M. Kemper, Mary K. Boyce, Murray P. Brown, Troy N. Trumble
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:BMC Genomics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-020-07228-z
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spelling doaj-2e344435a7c34f628afd91baa5afe63f2020-12-06T12:25:23ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642020-11-0121111210.1186/s12864-020-07228-zDifferential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine modelAnnette M. McCoy0Ann M. Kemper1Mary K. Boyce2Murray P. Brown3Troy N. Trumble4Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignDepartment of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignVeterinary Population Medicine Department, University of MinnesotaDepartment of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, University of FloridaVeterinary Population Medicine Department, University of MinnesotaAbstract Background Post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is a common and significant problem in equine athletes. It is a disease of the entire joint, with the synovium thought to be a key player in disease onset and progression due to its role in inflammation. The development of effective tools for early diagnosis and treatment of PTOA remains an elusive goal. Altered gene expression represents the earliest discernable disease-related change, and can provide valuable information about disease pathogenesis and identify potential therapeutic targets. However, there is limited work examining global gene expression changes in early disease. In this study, we quantified gene expression changes in the synovium of osteoarthritis-affected joints using an equine metacarpophalangeal joint (MCPJ) chip model of early PTOA. Synovial samples were collected arthroscopically from the MCPJ of 11 adult horses before (preOA) and after (OA) surgical induction of osteoarthritis and from sham-operated joints. After sequencing synovial RNA, Salmon was used to quasi-map reads and quantify transcript abundances. Differential expression analysis with the limma-trend method used a fold-change cutoff of log2(1.1). Functional annotation was performed with PANTHER at FDR < 0.05. Pathway and network analyses were performed in Reactome and STRING, respectively. Results RNA was sequenced from 28 samples (6 preOA, 11 OA, 11 sham). “Sham” and “preOA” were not different and were grouped. Three hundred ninety-seven genes were upregulated and 365 downregulated in OA synovium compared to unaffected. Gene ontology (GO) terms related to extracellular matrix (ECM) organization, angiogenesis, and cell signaling were overrepresented. There were 17 enriched pathways, involved in ECM turnover, protein metabolism, and growth factor signaling. Network analysis revealed clusters of differentially expressed genes involved in ECM organization, endothelial regulation, and cellular metabolism. Conclusions Enriched pathways and overrepresented GO terms reflected a state of high metabolic activity and tissue turnover in OA-affected tissue, suggesting that the synovium may retain the capacity to support healing and homeostasis in early disease. Limitations of this study include small sample size and capture of one point post-injury. Differentially expressed genes within key pathways may represent potential diagnostic markers or therapeutic targets for PTOA. Mechanistic validation of these findings is an important next step.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-020-07228-zDegenerative joint diseaseAnimal modelSynoviumMetacarpophalangeal jointOsteochondral fragmentRNAseq
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annette M. McCoy
Ann M. Kemper
Mary K. Boyce
Murray P. Brown
Troy N. Trumble
spellingShingle Annette M. McCoy
Ann M. Kemper
Mary K. Boyce
Murray P. Brown
Troy N. Trumble
Differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model
BMC Genomics
Degenerative joint disease
Animal model
Synovium
Metacarpophalangeal joint
Osteochondral fragment
RNAseq
author_facet Annette M. McCoy
Ann M. Kemper
Mary K. Boyce
Murray P. Brown
Troy N. Trumble
author_sort Annette M. McCoy
title Differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model
title_short Differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model
title_full Differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model
title_fullStr Differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model
title_full_unstemmed Differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model
title_sort differential gene expression analysis reveals pathways important in early post-traumatic osteoarthritis in an equine model
publisher BMC
series BMC Genomics
issn 1471-2164
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background Post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is a common and significant problem in equine athletes. It is a disease of the entire joint, with the synovium thought to be a key player in disease onset and progression due to its role in inflammation. The development of effective tools for early diagnosis and treatment of PTOA remains an elusive goal. Altered gene expression represents the earliest discernable disease-related change, and can provide valuable information about disease pathogenesis and identify potential therapeutic targets. However, there is limited work examining global gene expression changes in early disease. In this study, we quantified gene expression changes in the synovium of osteoarthritis-affected joints using an equine metacarpophalangeal joint (MCPJ) chip model of early PTOA. Synovial samples were collected arthroscopically from the MCPJ of 11 adult horses before (preOA) and after (OA) surgical induction of osteoarthritis and from sham-operated joints. After sequencing synovial RNA, Salmon was used to quasi-map reads and quantify transcript abundances. Differential expression analysis with the limma-trend method used a fold-change cutoff of log2(1.1). Functional annotation was performed with PANTHER at FDR < 0.05. Pathway and network analyses were performed in Reactome and STRING, respectively. Results RNA was sequenced from 28 samples (6 preOA, 11 OA, 11 sham). “Sham” and “preOA” were not different and were grouped. Three hundred ninety-seven genes were upregulated and 365 downregulated in OA synovium compared to unaffected. Gene ontology (GO) terms related to extracellular matrix (ECM) organization, angiogenesis, and cell signaling were overrepresented. There were 17 enriched pathways, involved in ECM turnover, protein metabolism, and growth factor signaling. Network analysis revealed clusters of differentially expressed genes involved in ECM organization, endothelial regulation, and cellular metabolism. Conclusions Enriched pathways and overrepresented GO terms reflected a state of high metabolic activity and tissue turnover in OA-affected tissue, suggesting that the synovium may retain the capacity to support healing and homeostasis in early disease. Limitations of this study include small sample size and capture of one point post-injury. Differentially expressed genes within key pathways may represent potential diagnostic markers or therapeutic targets for PTOA. Mechanistic validation of these findings is an important next step.
topic Degenerative joint disease
Animal model
Synovium
Metacarpophalangeal joint
Osteochondral fragment
RNAseq
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-020-07228-z
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