Sclerostin modulates mineralization degree and stiffness profile in the fibrocartilaginous enthesis for mechanical tissue integrity

Front Cell Dev Biol. 2024 Jun 4:12:1360041. doi: 10.3389/fcell.2024.1360041. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Fibrocartilaginous entheses consist of tendons, unmineralized and mineralized fibrocartilage, and subchondral bone, each exhibiting varying stiffness. Here we examined the functional role of sclerostin, expressed in mature mineralized fibrochondrocytes. Following rapid mineralization of unmineralized fibrocartilage and concurrent replacement of epiphyseal hyaline cartilage by bone, unmineralized fibrocartilage reexpanded after a decline in alkaline phosphatase activity at the mineralization front. Sclerostin was co-expressed with osteocalcin at the base of mineralized fibrocartilage adjacent to subchondral bone. In Scx-deficient mice with less mechanical loading due to defects of the Achilles tendon, sclerostin+ fibrochondrocyte count significantly decreased in the defective enthesis where chondrocyte maturation was markedly impaired in both fibrocartilage and hyaline cartilage. Loss of the Sost gene, encoding sclerostin, elevated mineral density in mineralized zones of fibrocartilaginous entheses. Atomic force microscopy analysis revealed increased fibrocartilage stiffness. These lines of evidence suggest that sclerostin in mature mineralized fibrochondrocytes acts as a modulator for mechanical tissue integrity of fibrocartilaginous entheses.

Keywords: Sost; fibrocartilage; fibrochondrocytes; mineralization; sclerostin.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by JSPS Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Grant Numbers JP21H03107, JP18H02966, JP21KK0161, and JP17K17092); JST-CREST (Grant Number JPMJCR22L5); Phoenix Leader Education Program for Renaissance from Radiation Disaster funded by the Program for Leading Graduate Schools; the Frontier Development Program for Genome Editing funded by the Doctoral Program for World Leading Innovative and Smart Education; JST SPRING (Grant Number JPMJSP2132); and the Cooperative Research Program of Institute for Life and Medical Sciences, Kyoto University.