The pyroptosis is a causative agent of rheumatoid arthritis, a systemic autoimmune disease merged with degenerative articular cartilage. Nevertheless, the precise mechanism of extracellular acidosis on chondrocyte pyroptosis is largely unclear. Acid...
The pyroptosis is a causative agent of rheumatoid arthritis, a systemic autoimmune disease merged with degenerative articular cartilage. Nevertheless, the precise mechanism of extracellular acidosis on chondrocyte pyroptosis is largely unclear. Acid‐sensing ion channels (ASICs) belong to an extracellular H+‐activated cation channel family. Accumulating evidence has highlighted activation of ASICs induced by extracellular acidosis upregulate calpain and calcineurin expression in arthritis. In the present study, to investigate the expression and the role of acid‐sensing ion channel 1a (ASIC1a), calpain, calcineurin, and NLRP3 inflammasome proteins in regulating acid‐induced articular chondrocyte pyroptosis, primary rat articular chondrocytes were subjected to different pH, different time, and different treatments with or without ASIC1a, calpain‐2, and calcineurin, respectively. Initially, the research results showed that extracellular acidosis‐induced the protein expression of ASIC1a in a pH‐ and time‐dependent manner, and the messenger RNA and protein expressions of calpain, calcineurin, NLRP3, apoptosis‐associated speck‐like protein, and caspase‐1 were significantly increased in a time‐dependent manner. Furthermore, the inhibition of ASIC1a, calpain‐2, or calcineurin, respectively, could decrease the cell death accompanied with the decreased interleukin‐1β level, and the decreased expression of ASIC1a, calpain‐2, calcineurin, and NLRP3 inflammasome proteins. Taken together, these results indicated the activation of ASIC1a induced by extracellular acidosis could trigger pyroptosis of rat articular chondrocytes, the mechanism of which might partly be involved with the activation of calpain‐2/calcineurin pathway.