Cartilage defects are difficult to heal because articular cartilage is both avascular and aneural. Directing adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ADSCs) toward a chondrogenic fate in vitro is regarded as a promising therapeutic strategy. However, the endogenous pathways that specify chondrogenic fate remain incompletely defined. Herein, we identify cholesterol-25-hydroxylase (CH25H) as a key inducer of early chondrogenic differentiation that upregulates the cartilage marker genes SOX9, ACAN, and COL2A1. In ADSCs, FPR1 knockdown and rescue experiments, together with pharmacological inhibition of FPR1 or AKT, supported a signalling model in which 25-HC engages FPR1 to promote AKT/GSK3β pathway activation and chondrogenic differentiation. Surface plasmon resonance assays show that 25-HC directly binds to FPR1 with a dissociation constant of 1.18 µM. Molecular docking and membrane MD/MM/GBSA analyses provided structural context, suggesting stable accommodation of 25-HC in an FPR1 pocket and nominating candidate contacts (including a F81/V105 hydrophobic clamp) for future mutagenesis. In a rat trochlear cartilage-defect model, intra-defect implantation of ADSC-laden hydrogel combined with weekly intra-articular 25-HC dosing was associated with improved repair features, while co-administration of Cyclosporin H/HCH6-1 reduced these benefits. Together, these findings delineate the CH25H/25-HC–FPR1 axis as an endogenous metabolite–GPCR signalling pathway that couples cholesterol metabolism to chondrogenic fate specification in ADSCs. CH25H-generated 25-HC links cholesterol metabolism to chondrogenic differentiation of adipose-derived stem cells through FPR1-AKT signalling and improves cartilage repair in vivo.
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Yang Wang
Wang Ye
Yi Chen
Communications Biology
Guizhou University
Guiyang Medical University
Guizhou Provincial People's Hospital
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Wang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2cb9e4eeef8a2a6b2007 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-026-10041-1
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