Abstract
Osteoarthritis involves complex interactions between articular joint tissues and the immune system, which is implicated in molecular trafficking via barrier-function modulating cytokines. The current study aims to test effects of an acute spike in TNF-α or TGF-β on vascular barrier function at multiple length scales, from the heart to tissue compartments of the knee, and cellular inhabitants of those respective compartments, in a spontaneous guinea pig model of osteoarthritis. First we quantified the intensity of a fluorescent-tagged 70 kDa tracer, similar in size to albumin, the most prevalent transporter protein in the blood, in tissue compartments of bone (periosteum, marrow space, compact bone, and epiphyseal bone) and cartilage (superficial cartilage, calcified cartilage, and the interface between, i.e., the epiphyseal line), as well as at sites of tendon attachment to bone (entheses). We then examined tracer presence and intensity in the respective pericellular and extracellular matrix zones of bone and cartilage. Acute exposure to TGF-β reduced barrier function (increased permeability) at nearest vascular interfaces in four of eight tissue compartments studied, compared to TNF-α where one of eight tissue compartments showed significant diminishment in barrier function. The increase in permeability associated with reduced barrier function was observed at both tissue compartment and cellular length scales. The observation of pericellular transport of the albumin-sized molecules to osteocytes contrasts with previous observations of barrier function in healthy, untreated animals and is indicative of increased molecular transport in pericellular regions of musculoskeletal tissues in cytokine-treated animals. Understanding age- and disease-related changes in molecular transport within musculoskeletal structures, such as the knee joint, is crucial for elucidating the etiology and pathogenesis of osteoarthritis.