Pain and knee damage in male and female mice in the medial meniscal transection-induced osteoarthritis Pain and knee damage in male and female mice in the medial meniscal transection-induced osteoarthritis

Authors
J Temp, D Labuz, R Negrete, V Sunkara, H Machelska


Lab
Department of Experimental Anesthesiology, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Berlin, Germany

Journal
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage

Abstract
Objective To investigate sex effects on pain-related behaviors in the medial meniscal transection (MMT) knee osteoarthritis (OA) model.
Methods Experiments were performed in male and female C57BL/6J mice (12/group/sex). MMT was induced by transection of the medial collateral ligament and the medial meniscus. Sham-operated and naïve mice served as controls. Mechanical and heat sensitivity in hind paws, hind limb use, and locomotor activity were measured for 3 months. Knee histology was performed on week 12.
Results In males, MMT triggered a bi-phasic mechanical hypersensitivity and decreased load on OA limb, with an acute post-operative (1–5 days) and chronic (3–12 weeks) OA phases separated by a remission in the intermediate phase (1–2 weeks). Females showed a less pronounced bi-phasic pattern, with a greater mechanical hypersensitivity, but not poorer limb use, than males in the intermediate phase (maximal difference: 1.1 g, 95% confidence intervals (CI) [0.7, 1.5]). There were no major sex differences in the chronic phase. MMT did not induce heat hypersensitivity or change in locomotor activity in the chronic phase in both sexes. MMT caused more severe cartilage damage in males than in females (maximal difference: 1.1 score points, 95% CI [1.9, 0.3]), and a comparable between sexes osteophyte formation. The knee damage did not correlate with pain.
Conclusions MMT modelled human knee OA well, capturing cartilage destruction and osteophyte formation, mechanical pain, and poorer limb use in both sexes. Sex differences in pain were modality- and time-dependent, reflecting complex sex-related features of human OA.

BIOSEB Instruments Used:
Dynamic Weight Bearing 2.0 (BIO-DWB-DUAL)

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