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Differential Secretome Profiling of Human Osteoarthritic Synoviocytes Treated with Biotechnological Unsulfated and Marine Sulfated Chondroitins

Authors :
Antonietta Stellavato
Valentina Vassallo
Angela Chambery
Rosita Russo
Mariangela Valletta
Donatella Cimini
Paolo V. Pedone
Chiara Schiraldi
Russo, Rosita
Vassallo, Valentina
Stellavato, Antonietta
Valletta, Mariangela
Cimini, Donatella
Pedone, Paolo Vincenzo
Schiraldi, Chiara
Chambery, Angela
Source :
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Volume 21, Issue 11, International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Vol 21, Iss 3746, p 3746 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Symptomatic slow-acting drugs (SYSADOA) are increasingly used as effective therapies for osteoarthritis, representing an attractive alternative to analgesics or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to relieve disease symptoms. Pharmaceutical preparations of chondroitin sulfate, derived from animal sources, alone or in combination with glucosamine sulfate, are widely recognized for their beneficial effect on osteoarthritis treatment. A growing interest has also been devoted to understanding the molecular mechanisms modulated by SYSADOA using -omic strategies, most of which rely on chondrocytes as a model system. In this work, by using an integrated strategy based on unbiased proteomics and targeted cytokine profiling by a multiplexed protein array, we identified differences in the secretomes of human osteoarthritic synoviocytes in response to biotechnological unsulfated, and marine sulfated chondroitins treatments. The combined strategy allowed the identification of candidate proteins showing both common and distinct regulation responses to the two treatments of chondroitins. These molecules, mainly belonging to ECM proteins, enzymes, enzymatic inhibitors and cytokines, are potentially correlated to treatment outcomes. Overall, the present results provide an integrated overview of protein changes in human osteoarthritic synoviocytes secretome associated to different chondroitin treatments, thus improving current knowledge of the biochemical effects driven by these drugs potentially involved in pathways associated to osteoarthritis pathogenesis.

Details

ISSN :
14220067
Volume :
21
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of molecular sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8f7944c82b4855f43b2e10a2649973d1