Senescent Mesenchymal Cells Cause Localized Inflammation in Osteoarthritic Cartilage

Given the failure of a locally injected senolytic drug to make a meaningful impact in osteoarthritis, the present consensus at the senolytics end of the longevity industry appears to be that systemic inflammatory signalling from senescent cells elsewhere in the body outweighs the contribution of local senescent cells in osteoarthritic joints. But perhaps the senolytic drug used in the failed trial was not a good candidate for humans; it remains to be seen as to whether better outcomes can be produced by systemic senolytic approaches in clinical trials for osteoarthritis. Meanwhile, researchers here suggest that there is in fact a meaningful contribution to harmful inflammation arising from senescent cells in osteoarthritic cartilage, and propose that the nature of the senescent cell population may explain some of the apparently contradictory past results. Although osteoathritis (OA) was considered as a non-inflammatory disease, an ever-increasing body of evidence suggests that chronic degeneration of the joint is associated with persistent long-term low-grade inflammation in the joint. The source of inflammation in OA is unknown, although it has been shown to associate with high-fat diet, mechanical injury, and aging. We have shown here that one of the sources of joint inflammation is mesenchymal stromal cells (OA-MSC) within cartilage itself. OA-MSC synthesizes pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines that have been implicated in OA pathogenesis. We demonstrated th...
Source: Fight Aging! - Category: Research Authors: Tags: Daily News Source Type: blogs