Bone and joint disorders have an enormous personal- and societal impact. Diagnosis and treatment of these disorders are most efficient if targeted screening, accurate diagnosis, and targeted... Show moreBone and joint disorders have an enormous personal- and societal impact. Diagnosis and treatment of these disorders are most efficient if targeted screening, accurate diagnosis, and targeted treatment are available. To enable targeted screening, the population at risk must be well-defined, and categorized if required. Subsequently, screening- and diagnostic methods must have good, or excellent predictive value and finally, treatment must target the disease, thus spare healthy tissues and processes and thereby avoid adverse events.The aim of this thesis is to gain new insights about the diagnostic process- and treatment of pathological conditions of the bone and joints, namely male urological cancer-induced bone loss and inflammatory arthritis. Show less
Osteoarthritis is one of the most common musculoskeletal disorders. Despite its high prevalence, the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis is incompletely understood. A major risk factor for... Show moreOsteoarthritis is one of the most common musculoskeletal disorders. Despite its high prevalence, the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis is incompletely understood. A major risk factor for osteoarthritis is obesity. Not only due to increased mechanical stress, but also due to systemic factors such as lipids. Our knowledge on how lipids are involved in osteoarthritis is limited. Therefore, this thesis focusses on the association of lipids with hand and knee osteoarthritis. Firstly, we investigated the reproducibility of lipid measurements to guide future lipidomic research. Subsequently, comparison of the lipid profile of osteoarthritis patients in different disease stages showed that the lipid profile explained disease severity to a limited extent. We observed the strongest association of the lipid profile with hand pain, and no association with knee osteoarthritis. This suggests that lipotoxicity may play a larger role in the hand, while in the knee mechanical stress is more relevant. In addition, treatment with anti-inflammatory medication resulted in a change in lipid concentrations in patients with hand osteoarthritis, suggesting that lipids are involved in inflammation and/or pain processes. These insights may increase our understanding of osteoarthritis pathophysiology and lead to new targets for future development of disease modifying osteoarthritis medication. Show less
Diseases and injuries related to bone and cartilage severely affect the function of the musculoskeletal system. They affect the life quality of patients and make them unable to move. The... Show moreDiseases and injuries related to bone and cartilage severely affect the function of the musculoskeletal system. They affect the life quality of patients and make them unable to move. The peculiarities of bone and cartilage structures mean that the therapeutic and surgical treatments that have been developed till date have a lot of disadvantages and limitations. Consequently, the development of new strategies for administering drugs that favor localized delivery is very important to achieve increasingly better treatments.The design and preparation of platforms for this purpose is a constant challenge, and for this reason three types of matrices were designed and prepared in the thesis. The drugs encapsulated in these matrices were cefazolin sodium, betamethasone, dexamethasone sodium phosphate, and Etanercept (anti-TNF-α drug). We were able to show that our matrices modified the release of the incorporated molecules and the composition of the prepared materials played an important role in the kinetics of the release process. Physicochemical characterizations were carried out on all the materials, obtaining that in each case the morphology varied once modifications in the matrix composition had been introduced. Biological studies in vitro and in vivo showed the cytocompatibility of the materials and also the ability to help repair damaged cartilage. Show less
To advance development of effective disease modifying OA treatments, a better understanding of its pathophysiological mechanisms is necessary. By studyinga family with early onset OA and high... Show moreTo advance development of effective disease modifying OA treatments, a better understanding of its pathophysiological mechanisms is necessary. By studyinga family with early onset OA and high cartilage mineralization, a likely causal mutation in the TNF receptor superfamily member 11b (TNFRSF11B) encoding for osteoprotegerin (OPG) was identified. This mutation causes a 19 amino acid extension in the C-terminal domain of OPG (OPG-XL). OPG is a decoy receptor that competes with receptor activator of the nuclear KB factor (RANK) for the binding of nuclear factor KB ligand (RANKL). This triad is known for regulating the formation of osteoclasts, hence playing a critical role in bone remodeling. Given that TNFRSF11B is also one of the highest upregulated genes in OA lesioned cartilage as compared to preserved, this gene is likely underlying OA development and progression but its implication in cartilage homeostasis is as of yet unknown.Altogether, this thesis highlights the role of OPG in OA development by generating an OPG overexpression system in primary chondrocytes and by studying a rare mutation in TNFRSF11B. By further generating neo-cartilage, neo-bone and osteoclasts from the OPG-XL family members, we showed a bidirectional interplay of OPG-XL characterized by higher bone resorption and higher cartilage mineralization. Novel treatments for this family and extrapolation to common OA could be addressed on highly differentially expressed genes such as MGP and DIO2. Finally, the pleiotropy that OPG-XL showed indicates a beneficial or detrimental stage depending on the tissue, making OPG-XL, and likely OPG, a double-edged sword in OA development. Show less
This thesis aims to increase the understanding of human osteoarthritis pathophysiology by developing reliable biomimetic ex vivo human osteochondral explant models and focussing on the role of... Show moreThis thesis aims to increase the understanding of human osteoarthritis pathophysiology by developing reliable biomimetic ex vivo human osteochondral explant models and focussing on the role of osteoarthritis-relevant triggers (mechanical stress) and interacting genetic factors for developing treatment targets. Human aged joint tissues were collected in the Research in Articular Osteoarthritis Cartilage (RAAK) biobank. To add knowledge of the osteoarthritis pathophysiological processes, aged human ex vivo osteochondral explants were subject to three osteoarthritis-relevant triggers, being inflammation, hypertrophy and injurious mechanical stress. Next, knowledge on early initiating processes occurring in mechano-pathology was investigated by applying RNA-sequencing to cartilage of aged human osteochondral explants subjected to mechanical stress. In addition, to show that the human osteochondral explant model could also be used for genetic interaction studies, we investigated expression of the osteoarthritis risk gene MGP in relation to rs1800801 genotypes. By combining information from RNA-sequencing datasets of cartilage and bone with osteoarthritis-relevant triggers in cartilage and bone explants we investigated the role of MGP and vitamin K in osteoarthritis. Lastly, the injurious mechanical explant model was exploited to determine the effectivity of inhibiting the osteoarthritis risk gene DIO2 by iopanoic acid treatment either by burst or prolonged release from PLGA-PEG nanoparticles. Show less
The studies described in this thesis provides the field with valuable data on the potential therapeutic effects of fatty acids and specialized pro-resolving lipid mediators in rheumatoid arthritis... Show moreThe studies described in this thesis provides the field with valuable data on the potential therapeutic effects of fatty acids and specialized pro-resolving lipid mediators in rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. The omega-6 fatty acid AdA shows potent pro-resolving effects on the production of pro-inflammatory chemoattractantLTB4 with great promise to limit RA disease progression. In contrast to the promising potential therapeutic effects of AdA in RA, the evidence for pro-resolving effects in OA is still scarce. The results of the studies from this thesis show that neither LXA4, LXB4, RvE2 or Mar-1 were able to reduce OA disease activity in the experimental set-up we used. Finally, the studies described in this thesis show the utmost critical importance of the right sample preparation and storage for the intended subsequent analysis. Show less
The aim of this thesis was to combine transcriptomics, genetics and human disease modelling to obtain further insight into molecular processes underlying osteoarthritis. More specifically, we aimed... Show moreThe aim of this thesis was to combine transcriptomics, genetics and human disease modelling to obtain further insight into molecular processes underlying osteoarthritis. More specifically, we aimed to elucidate the role of long noncoding RNAs expression changes as aberrant epigenetic mechanism in regulating gene expression in chondrocytes. We identified previously unknown long noncoding RNAs associated with the osteoarthritic process and showed enrichment for cis¬-regulation of these long noncoding RNAs with target messenger RNAs.To provide insight in the etiology of osteoarthritis, causal pathways can be identified by unravelling the substantial genetic component. To this end, we investigated the biological functionality of the high-impact, pathogenic mutation identified in the gene fibronectin1 in an early-onset osteoarthritis family. We demonstrated that the identified causal missense mutation in the gelatin-binding domain of the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin resulted in significant decreased binding capacity to collagen type II.Finally, the common function of fibronectin1 was investigated in cartilage and what changes occur at the transcript level of fibronectin1 with osteoarthritis. Down-regulation of full-length fibronectin was unbeneficial for in vitro chondrogenesis, we hypothesize that this was caused by decreased availability of the classical integrin binding site of fibronectin. Show less