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Extended report
Underlying molecular mechanisms of DIO2 susceptibility in symptomatic osteoarthritis
  1. Nils Bomer1,2,
  2. Wouter den Hollander1,
  3. Yolande F M Ramos1,
  4. Steffan D Bos1,3,
  5. Ruud van der Breggen1,
  6. Nico Lakenberg1,
  7. Barry A Pepers8,
  8. Annelies E van Eeden1,
  9. Arash Darvishan9,
  10. Elmar W Tobi1,2,
  11. Bouke J Duijnisveld4,
  12. Erik B van den Akker1,5,
  13. Bastiaan T Heijmans1,3,
  14. Willeke MC van Roon-Mom8,
  15. Fons J Verbeek9,
  16. Gerjo J V M van Osch6,7,
  17. Rob G H H Nelissen4,
  18. P Eline Slagboom1,2,3,
  19. Ingrid Meulenbelt1,3
  1. 1Department of Molecular Epidemiology, LUMC, Leiden, The Netherlands
  2. 2IDEAL, The Netherlands
  3. 3Genomics Initiative, sponsored by the NCHA, Leiden, The Netherlands
  4. 4Department of Orthopaedics, LUMC, Leiden, The Netherlands
  5. 5The Delft Bioinformatics Lab, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands
  6. 6Department of Orthopaedics, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  7. 7Deptartment of Otorhinolaryngology, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  8. 8Department of Human Genetics, LUMC, Leiden, The Netherlands
  9. 9Department of Imaging & BioInformatics, LIACS, Leiden, The Netherlands
  1. Correspondence to Dr Ingrid Meulenbelt, Department Medical Statistics and Bioinformatics, Section Molecular Epidemiology, Leiden University Medical Center, LUMC Post-zone S-05-P, P.O. Box 9600, Leiden 2300 RC, The Netherlands; i.meulenbelt{at}lumc.nl

Abstract

Objectives To investigate how the genetic susceptibility gene DIO2 confers risk to osteoarthritis (OA) onset in humans and to explore whether counteracting the deleterious effect could contribute to novel therapeutic approaches.

Methods Epigenetically regulated expression of DIO2 was explored by assessing methylation of positional CpG-dinucleotides and the respective DIO2 expression in OA-affected and macroscopically preserved articular cartilage from end-stage OA patients. In a human in vitro chondrogenesis model, we measured the effects when thyroid signalling during culturing was either enhanced (excess T3 or lentiviral induced DIO2 overexpression) or decreased (iopanoic acid).

Results OA-related changes in methylation at a specific CpG dinucleotide upstream of DIO2 caused significant upregulation of its expression (β=4.96; p=0.0016). This effect was enhanced and appeared driven specifically by DIO2 rs225014 risk allele carriers (β=5.58, p=0.0006). During in vitro chondrogenesis, DIO2 overexpression resulted in a significant reduced capacity of chondrocytes to deposit extracellular matrix (ECM) components, concurrent with significant induction of ECM degrading enzymes (ADAMTS5, MMP13) and markers of mineralisation (ALPL, COL1A1). Given their concurrent and significant upregulation of expression, this process is likely mediated via HIF-2α/RUNX2 signalling. In contrast, we showed that inhibiting deiodinases during in vitro chondrogenesis contributed to prolonged cartilage homeostasis as reflected by significant increased deposition of ECM components and attenuated upregulation of matrix degrading enzymes.

Conclusions Our findings show how genetic variation at DIO2 could confer risk to OA and raised the possibility that counteracting thyroid signalling may be a novel therapeutic approach.

This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/

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