Failed cellular surveillance enables pathogenic matrix deposition in a COL2A1-related osteoarthritis
Summary
Mutations in the COL2A1 gene, encoding procollagen-II, cause various chondrodysplasias, including precocious osteoarthritis with mild spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia engendered by the p.Arg719Cys substitution. The molecular mechanisms underlying these disorders remain incompletely understood, largely owing to the absence of models faithfully recapitulating the human disease. Here, we developed an in vitro human cartilage model using isogenic induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines carrying either wild-type or Arg719Cys COL2A1. Directed differentiation into chondrocytes yielded cartilage tissues that were analyzed by immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, SDS-PAGE, and RNA-sequencing. Tissues derived from Arg719Cys heterozygotes displayed a deficient matrix, closely reflecting the human disease phenotype. Arg719Cys procollagen-II was excessively post-translationally modified and partially retained within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), leading to ER distention. Notably, despite introduction of an aberrant cysteine residue-expected to engage redox-sensitive folding and quality control pathways-Arg719Cys procollagen-II was not detectably recognized by the ER proteostasis network. The resulting inability to mount a quality control response, including absent activation of the unfolded protein response, indicates a failure in cellular surveillance. As a result, malformed procollagen-II both accumulates intracellularly and is secreted, contributing to the deposition of a structurally compromised extracellular matrix that drives disease pathology. The iPSC-derived cartilage model presented here provides a genetically defined, expandable, and human-based system for dissecting mechanisms of failed proteostasis in collagenopathies. These findings shed light on the types of substitutions in procollagen that cells do or do not recognize, and underscore the therapeutic potential of targeting cellular surveillance and collagen quality control pathways in COL2A1-related disorders and beyond. Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Authors | Yammine KM, Mirda Abularach S, Xiong M, Kim SY, Bikovtseva AA, Butty VL, Schiavoni RP, Bateman JF, Lamandé SR, Shoulders MD |
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Journal | The Journal of biological chemistry |
Publication Date | 2025 Aug;301(8):110436 |
PubMed | 40602718 |
PubMed Central | PMC12340388 |
DOI | 10.1016/j.jbc.2025.110436 |