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Tissue-specific and spatially dependent metabolic signatures perturbed by injury in skeletally mature male and female C57Bl/6J mice

Welhaven, H. D.; Welfley, A. H.; Brahmachary, P. P.; Smith, D. F.; Bothner, B.; June, R. K.

2025-02-07 biochemistry
10.1101/2024.09.30.615873 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Joint injury is a risk factor for post-traumatic osteoarthritis. However, metabolic and microarchitectural changes within the joint post-injury in both sexes remain unexplored. This study identified tissue-specific and spatially-dependent metabolic signatures in male and female mice using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI) and LC-MS metabolomics. Male and female C57Bl/6J mice were subjected to non-invasive joint injury. Eight days post-injury, serum, synovial fluid, and whole joints were collected for metabolomics. Analyses compared between injured, contralateral, and naive mice, revealing local and systemic responses. Data indicate sex influences metabolic profiles across all tissues, particularly amino acid, purine, and pyrimidine metabolism. MALDI-MSI generated 2D ion images of bone, the joint interface, and bone marrow, highlighting increased lipid species in injured limbs, suggesting physiological changes across injured joints at metabolic and spatial levels. Together, these findings reveal significant metabolic changes after injury, with notable sex differences. Significance statementOsteoarthritis, the leading cause of disability worldwide, disproportionately affects females with sex being one of the strongest predictors of disease. This disparity is partly driven by sex-specific differences in injury susceptibility, increasing the likelihood of traumatic injury to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), other ligaments, and menisci. Using a non-invasive injury model, we demonstrate that injury perturbs the local joint environment and has systemic effects in a sex-specific manner. Furthermore, by leveraging matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-mass spectrometry imaging of the joint, we provide new insight into the composition of osteochondral tissue at the metabolite level. These sexually dimorphic metabolic responses to joint injury advance current understanding of the complex sexual dimorphism in OA pathogenesis providing a foundation for targeted therapeutic strategies and improved patient outcomes for female patients.

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