Effect of age on pyridinoline and pentosidine matrix cross-links in the desert sand rat intervertebral disc |
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Authors: | Hemlata K. Pokharna Betty Boja Vincent Monnier Roland W. Moskowitz |
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Affiliation: | (1) Division of Rheumatic Diseases, Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Susa Western Reserve University, 44106 Cleveland, Ohio, USA;(2) Institute of Pathology, Susa Western Reserve University, 44106 Cleveland, Ohio, USA;(3) University Hospitals, 2074 Abington Road, 44106 Cleveland, OH, USA |
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Abstract: | Spondylosis in the desert sand rat (Psammomys obesus) has been studied as a model for intervertebral disc degeneration. Reducing sugars, which react with protein amino groups to form a diverse group of moieties with fluorescence and cross-linking properties, have been implicated in the structural and functional alterations of proteins that occur during aging and long-term diabetes. This study was undertaken to determine the changes in two matrix cross-links of the intervertebral disc and to study their association with aging. Two types of cross-links were studied: the physiological cross-link, pyridinoline, which is initiated by lysyl oxidase; and the non-enzymatically initiated cross-link, pentosidine. A significant increase in pentosidine, but not pyridinoline, was observed in the intervertebral disc with aging. Radiological, histological and biochemical findings support a hypothesis that subchondral bone responses, marked by increased bone density, contribute to alterations in the intervertebral disc. Cross-link changes in the structural proteins of the disc may contribute to the progressive fibrocartilage degradation typical of intervertebral disc disease as an effect of age. |
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Keywords: | collagen intervertebral disc degeneration pentosidine pyridinoline |
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