Quercetin Alleviates Osteoarthritis Progression in Rats by Suppressing Inflammation and Apoptosis via Inhibition of IRAK1/NLRP3 SignalingWenjun Li, Yeyang Wang, Yaqin Tang et al.|Journal of Inflammation Research|2021 INTRODUCTION: Quercetin was recently reported to help protect against osteoarthritis (OA) progression, but the molecular mechanism for that protective affect remains unclear. METHODS: Here, OA model rats were intraperitoneally injected with quercetin, and the severity of cartilage damage in the rats was evaluated by H&E, Safranin O, and Toluidine blue, as well as by using the Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) Scoring System. Additionally, rat chondrocytes were treated with quercetin and then stimulated with IL-1β. The levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-18, and TNF-α) were detected by ELISA.Cell apoptosis was evaluated by flow cytometry and Hoechst staining. ROS levels were measured using a DCFH-DA probe. Protein expression was evaluated by Western blotting, immunohistochemical staining, and immunofluorescence. RESULTS: Our data showed that quercetin attenuated the degeneration and erosion of articular cartilage, suppressed inflammation and apoptosis, and downregulated the levels of IRAK1, NLRP3, and caspase-3 expression. In vitro data showed that overexpression of NLRP3 could reverse the suppressive effect of quercetin on IL-1β-induced rat chondrocyte injuries. Importantly, rescue experiments confirmed that quercetin inhibited IL-1β-induced rat chondrocyte injuries in vitro by suppressing the IRAK1/NLRP3 signaling pathway. CONCLUSION: Our study indicated that quercetin inhibits IL-1β-induced inflammation and cartilage degradation by suppressing the IRAK1/NLRP3 signaling pathway.
Quercetin as a promising intervention for rat osteoarthritis by decreasing <scp>M1</scp>‐polarized macrophages via blocking the <scp>TRPV1</scp>‐mediated <scp>P2X7</scp>/<scp>NLRP3</scp> signaling pathwayW Li, Hebei He, Min Du et al.|Phytotherapy Research|2024 Osteoarthritis (OA) is characterized by an imbalance between M1 and M2 polarized synovial macrophages. Quercetin has shown protective effects against OA by altering M1/M2-polarized macrophages, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, rat chondrocytes were treated with 10 ng/mL of IL-1β. To create M1-polarized macrophages in vitro, rat bone marrow-derived macrophages (rBMDMs) were treated with 100 ng/mL LPS. To mimic OA conditions observed in vivo, a co-culture system of chondrocytes and macrophages was established. ATP release assays, immunofluorescence assays, Fluo-4 AM staining, Transwell assays, ELISA assays, and flow cytometry were performed. Male adult Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were used to create an OA model. Histological analyses, including H&E, and safranin O-fast green staining were performed. Our data showed a quercetin-mediated suppression of calcium ion influx and ATP release, with concurrent downregulation of TRPV1 and P2X7 in the chondrocytes treated with IL-1β. Activation of TRPV1 abolished the quercetin-mediated effects on calcium ion influx and ATP release in chondrocytes treated with IL-1β. In the co-culture system, overexpression of P2X7 in macrophages attenuated the quercetin-mediated effects on M1 polarization, migration, and inflammation. Either P2X7 or NLRP3 knockdown attenuated IL-1β-induced M1/M2 polarization, migration, and inflammation. Moreover, overexpression of TRPV1 reduced the quercetin-mediated suppressive effects on OA by promoting M1/M2-polarized macrophages in vivo. Collectively, our data showed that quercetin-induced suppression of TRPV1 leads to a delay in OA progression by shifting the macrophage polarization from M1 to M2 subtypes via modulation of the P2X7/NLRP3 pathway.
The silencing of miR-199a-5p protects the articular cartilage through MAPK4 in osteoarthritisHanyu Lu, Yixin Yang, Shuanji Ou et al.|Annals of Translational Medicine|2022 Background: Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common joint disorder, and places a heavy burden on individuals and society. As conventional therapies, such as surgery, rarely cure the disorder, targeted therapies represent a promising alternative. This research sought to explore the potential effect of miR-199a-5p on the development of OA. Methods: Based on the OA rat model, the serum was collected at 6 and 12 weeks, and microRNA (miRNA) sequencing was performed. A bioinformatics analysis was conducted to examine the differentially expressed micro ribonucleic acids, and qRT-PCR (real-time quantitative PCR) was conducted to determine their expression in the joint tissues of rats with OA. Rats articular chondrocytes were collected and treated with a miR-199a-5p antagomir or agomir. Afterwards, cell viability, autophagy was determinated. Dual luciferase was used to verify that miR-199a-5p targets the regulation of mitogen-stimulated protein kinase 4 (MAPK4). Subsequently, in chondrocytes, MAPK was knockdown to rescue the effect of miR-199a-5p inhibition, and cell viability and autophagy were examined. Finally, the OA model was treated with miR-199a-5p antagomir to detect joint pathology, cartilage tissue and inflammatory factor and autophagy was measured. Results: MiR-199a-5p was greatly upregulated in OA, and miRNA was found to be differentially expressed in OA tissues. MAPK4 was identified to be a target gene of miR-199-5p. Inhibiting miR-199a-5p not only decreased the survival of chondrocytes and induced apoptosis, but also relieved inflammation and decreased the content of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Further, the silencing of miR-199a-5p protected the articular cartilage and improved gait abnormalities, but this effect was abrogated by the silencing of MAPK4. Conclusions: The silencing of miR-199a-5p appears to improve gait abnormalities, promote the survival of chondrocytes, and improve the condition of OA. Our findings may lead to the development of miR-199a-5p-based targeted therapy for OA.
Evaluating Large Language Models for Preoperative Patient Education in Superior Capsular Reconstruction: Comparative Study of Claude, GPT, and GeminiYukang Liu, Hua Li, Jianfeng Ouyang et al.|JMIR Perioperative Medicine|2025 Background: Large language models (LLMs) are revolutionizing natural language processing, increasingly applied in clinical settings to enhance preoperative patient education. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and applicability of various LLMs in preoperative patient education by analyzing their responses to superior capsular reconstruction (SCR)-related inquiries. Methods: In total, 10 sports medicine clinical experts formulated 11 SCR issues and developed preoperative patient education strategies during a webinar, inputting 12 text commands into Claude-3-Opus (Anthropic), GPT-4-Turbo (OpenAI), and Gemini-1.5-Pro (Google DeepMind). A total of 3 experts assessed the language models' responses for correctness, completeness, logic, potential harm, and overall satisfaction, while preoperative education documents were evaluated using DISCERN questionnaire and Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool instruments, and reviewed by 5 postoperative patients for readability and educational value; readability of all responses was also analyzed using the cntext package and py-readability-metrics. Results: Between July 1 and August 17, 2024, sports medicine experts and patients evaluated 33 responses and 3 preoperative patient education documents generated by 3 language models regarding SCR surgery. For the 11 query responses, clinicians rated Gemini significantly higher than Claude in all categories (P<.05) and higher than GPT in completeness, risk avoidance, and overall rating (P<.05). For the 3 educational documents, Gemini's Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool score significantly exceeded Claude's (P=.03), and patients rated Gemini's materials superior in all aspects, with significant differences in educational quality versus Claude (P=.02) and overall satisfaction versus both Claude (P<.01) and GPT (P=.01). GPT had significantly higher readability than Claude on 3 R-based metrics (P<.01). Interrater agreement was high among clinicians and fair among patients. Conclusions: Claude-3-Opus, GPT-4-Turbo, and Gemini-1.5-Pro effectively generated readable presurgical education materials but lacked citations and failed to discuss alternative treatments or the risks of forgoing SCR surgery, highlighting the need for expert oversight when using these LLMs in patient education.
Malvidin attenuates trauma‐induced heterotopic ossification of tendon in rats by targeting Rheb for degradation via the ubiquitin‐proteasome pathwayHuaji Jiang, Yan Ding, Xuemei Lin et al.|Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine|2024 The pathogenesis of trauma-induced heterotopic ossification (HO) in the tendon remains unclear, posing a challenging hurdle in treatment. Recognizing inflammation as the root cause of HO, anti-inflammatory agents hold promise for its management. Malvidin (MA), possessing anti-inflammatory properties, emerges as a potential agent to impede HO progression. This study aimed to investigate the effect of MA in treating trauma-induced HO and unravel its underlying mechanisms. Herein, the effectiveness of MA in preventing HO formation was assessed through local injection in a rat model. The potential mechanism underlying MA's treatment was investigated in the tendon-resident progenitor cells of tendon-derived stem cells (TDSCs), exploring its pathway in HO formation. The findings demonstrated that MA effectively hindered the osteogenic differentiation of TDSCs by inhibiting the mTORC1 signalling pathway, consequently impeding the progression of trauma-induced HO of Achilles tendon in rats. Specifically, MA facilitated the degradation of Rheb through the K48-linked ubiquitination-proteasome pathway by modulating USP4 and intercepted the interaction between Rheb and the mTORC1 complex, thus inhibiting the mTORC1 signalling pathway. Hence, MA presents itself as a promising candidate for treating trauma-induced HO in the Achilles tendon, acting by targeting Rheb for degradation through the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.