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1.
Cartilage damage in osteoarthritis (OA) is considered an imbalance between catabolic and anabolic factors, favoring the catabolic side. We assessed whether adenoviral overexpression of transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta) enhanced cartilage repair and whether TGFbeta-induced fibrosis was blocked by local expression of the intracellular TGFbeta inhibitor Smad7. We inflicted cartilage damage by injection of interleukin-1 (IL-1) into murine knee joints. After 2 days, we injected an adenovirus encoding TGFbeta. On day 4, we measured proteoglycan (PG) synthesis and content. To examine whether we could block TGFbeta-induced fibrosis and stimulate cartilage repair simultaneously, we injected Ad-TGFbeta and Ad-Smad7. This was performed both after IL-1-induced damage and in a model of primary OA. In addition to PG in cartilage, synovial fibrosis was measured by determining the synovial width and the number of procollagen I-expressing cells. Adenoviral overexpression of TGFbeta restored the IL-1-induced reduction in PG content and increased PG synthesis. TGFbeta-induced an elevation in PG content in cartilage of the OA model. TGFbeta-induced synovial fibrosis was strongly diminished by simultaneous synovial overexpression of Smad7 in the synovial lining. Of great interest, overexpression of Smad7 did not reduce the repair-stimulating effect of TGFbeta on cartilage. Adenoviral overexpression of TGFbeta stimulated repair of IL-1- and OA-damaged cartilage. TGFbeta-induced synovial fibrosis was blocked by locally inhibiting TGFbeta signaling in the synovial lining by simultaneously transfecting it with an adenovirus overexpressing Smad7.  相似文献   

2.
Cartilage damage in osteoarthritis (OA) is considered an imbalance between catabolic and anabolic factors, favoring the catabolic side. We assessed whether adenoviral overexpression of transforming growth factor-β (TGFβ) enhanced cartilage repair and whether TGFβ-induced fibrosis was blocked by local expression of the intracellular TGFβ inhibitor Smad7. We inflicted cartilage damage by injection of interleukin-1 (IL-1) into murine knee joints. After 2 days, we injected an adenovirus encoding TGFβ. On day 4, we measured proteoglycan (PG) synthesis and content. To examine whether we could block TGFβ-induced fibrosis and stimulate cartilage repair simultaneously, we injected Ad-TGFβ and Ad-Smad7. This was performed both after IL-1-induced damage and in a model of primary OA. In addition to PG in cartilage, synovial fibrosis was measured by determining the synovial width and the number of procollagen I-expressing cells. Adenoviral overexpression of TGFβ restored the IL-1-induced reduction in PG content and increased PG synthesis. TGFβ-induced an elevation in PG content in cartilage of the OA model. TGFβ-induced synovial fibrosis was strongly diminished by simultaneous synovial overexpression of Smad7 in the synovial lining. Of great interest, overexpression of Smad7 did not reduce the repair-stimulating effect of TGFβ on cartilage. Adenoviral overexpression of TGFβ stimulated repair of IL-1- and OA-damaged cartilage. TGFβ-induced synovial fibrosis was blocked by locally inhibiting TGFβ signaling in the synovial lining by simultaneously transfecting it with an adenovirus overexpressing Smad7.  相似文献   

3.
A hallmark of rheumatoid- and osteoarthritis (OA) is proinflammatory cytokine-induced degeneration of cartilage collagen and aggrecan by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and aggrecanases (ADAMTS). Effects of the Chinese herb, Tripterygium wilfordii Hook F (TWHF), on cartilage and its anti-arthritic mechanisms are poorly understood. This study investigated the impact of a purified derivative of TWHF, PG490 (triptolide), on cytokine-stimulated expression of the major cartilage damaging proteases, MMP-3, MMP-13, and ADAMTS4. PG490 inhibited cytokine-induced MMP-3, MMP-13 gene expression in primary human OA chondrocytes, bovine chondrocytes, SW1353 cells, and human synovial fibroblasts. Triptolide was effective at low doses and blocked the induction of MMP-13 by IL-1 in human and bovine cartilage explants. TWHF extract and PG490 also suppressed IL-1-, IL-17-, and TNF-alpha-induced expression of ADAMTS-4 in bovine chondrocytes. Thus, PG490 could protect cartilage from MMP- and aggrecanase-driven breakdown. The immunosuppressive, cartilage protective, and anti-inflammatory properties could make PG490 potentially a new therapeutic agent for arthritis.  相似文献   

4.
Explants of cartilage from tibiae of 11-12 days chick embryos were grown in organ culture. To one group hyaluronidase was added to the medium during the first 2 days of culture; the treated tissue was then cultured in medium without enzyme for a further 4 days. Control explants grown in hyaluronidase-free medium for 6 days grew rapidly in size and the total hexosamine content more than doubled during this time. After exposure to hyaluronidase, much of the hexosamine was lost from treated cartilage and appeared in the culture medium, but it was mostly replaced in the tissue during the subsequent recovery period. Analysis of cartilage and medium showed that net synthesis of hexosamine increased greatly in treated cartilage. The proteoglycans were extracted by two procedures from control and treated cartilage after 2, 4 and 6 days in culture. The hydrodynamic sizes of the purified proteoglycans were compared by gel chromatography and the composition of the gel-chromatographic fractions was determined. The proteoglycans from controls did not change during culture, but after exposure to hyaluronidase the proteoglycans from treated cartilage were of much smaller size and lower chondroitin sulphate content. During recovery, even though new proteoglycans were formed, they were nevertheless of smaller size and lower chondroitin sulphate content than control proteoglycans. They gradually became more like control proteoglycans during recovery from treatment, but even after 4 days they were not yet the same. After 2 days of treatment with the enzyme, the chondroitin sulphate in the cartilage was of shorter chain length than in controls but during recovery after 4 and 6 days in culture, the chain lengths in control and treated cartilage were similar. It is concluded that the proteoglycans formed in embryo cartilage in response to their depletion by enzyme treatment contained fewer chondroitin sulphate chains attached to the protein moiety of proteoglycans. This may have resulted from a failure under stress to glycosylate the protein moiety to the usual extent; alternatively the synthesis of normal proteoglycans of low chondroitin sulphate content may have increased, thus changing the proteoglycan population.  相似文献   

5.
We have purified a low molecular weight protein from medium conditioned by calf synovium with physical and biological properties similar to the leukocyte cytokine interleukin 1 (IL-1). The factor is active in stimulating the synthesis (three- to fivefold) of collagenase activator protein (CAP) by the surface (1-2 mm) of articular cartilage while CAP synthesis in the deeper zones of articular cartilage is not affected. Recombinant mouse IL-1 and commercially available purified human IL-1 are also capable of stimulating cartilage to synthesize and secrete CAP. The synthesis of other proteins, including collagenase, appeared to be unaffected by either the synovial factors or the human and mouse IL-1.  相似文献   

6.

Introduction  

Intraarticular administration of autologous conditioned serum (ACS) recently demonstrated some clinical effectiveness in treatment of osteoarthritis (OA). The current study aims to evaluate the in vitro effects of ACS on cartilage proteoglycan (PG) metabolism, its composition and the effects on synovial fluid (SF) cytokine levels following intraarticular ACS administration.  相似文献   

7.
Bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) has been proposed as a tool for cartilage repair and as a stimulant of chondrogenesis. In healthy cartilage, BMP-2 is hardly present, whereas it is highly expressed during osteoarthritis. To assess its function in cartilage, BMP-2 was overexpressed in healthy murine knee joints and the effects on proteoglycan (PG) synthesis and degradation were evaluated. Moreover, the contribution of BMP in repairing damage induced by interleukin-1 (IL-1) was investigated. Ad-BMP-2 was injected intra-articularly into murine knee joints, which were isolated 3, 7, and 21 days after injection for histology, immunohistochemistry, and autoradiography. In addition, patellar and tibial cartilage was isolated for RNA isolation or measurement of PG synthesis by means of 35SO4 2- incorporation. To investigate the role for BMP-2 in cartilage repair, cartilage damage was induced by intra-articular injection of IL-1. After 2 days, Ad-BMP-2, Ad-BMP-2 + Ad-gremlin, Ad-gremlin, or a control virus was injected. Whole knee joints were isolated for histology at day 4 or patellae were isolated to measure 35SO4 2- incorporation. BMP-2 stimulated PG synthesis in patellar cartilage on all days and in tibial cartilage on day 21. Aggrecan mRNA expression had increased on all days in patellar cartilage, with the highest increase on day 7. Collagen type II expression showed a similar expression pattern. In tibial cartilage, collagen type II and aggrecan mRNA expression had increased on days 7 and 21. BMP-2 overexpression also induced increased aggrecan degradation in cartilage. VDIPEN staining (indicating matrix metalloproteinase activity) was elevated on day 3 in tibial cartilage and on days 3 and 7 in patellar cartilage, but no longer was by day 21. Increased NITEGE staining (indicating aggrecanase activity) was found on days 7 and 21. In IL-1-damaged patellar cartilage, BMP-2 boosted PG synthesis. Blocking of BMP activity resulted in a decreased PG synthesis compared with IL-1 alone. This decreased PG synthesis was associated with PG depletion in the cartilage. These data show that BMP-2 boosts matrix turnover in intact and IL-damaged cartilage. Moreover, BMP contributes to the intrinsic repair capacity of damaged cartilage. Increased matrix turnover might be functional in replacing matrix molecules in the repair of a damaged cartilage matrix.  相似文献   

8.
A homogeneous preparation of catabolin from pig leucocytes caused a reversible dose-dependent (0.01-1 nM) decrease in the synthesis of proteoglycan in slices of pig articular cartilage cultured in serum-free medium. The monomers that were synthesized and secreted in the presence of catabolin had the same average hydrodynamic size and ability to aggregate as the controls, and the core protein was substituted with the same number of glycosaminoglycan chains. The chains were the same average length and charge as normal and were sulphated to the same extent as the controls. Newly synthesized extracellular proteoglycan was not preferentially degraded. A 2-3-fold increase in glycosaminoglycan synthesis occurred in control and catabolin-treated cartilage in the presence of beta-D-xyloside (1 mM), more than 80% being secreted into the medium as free chains. Decreased incorporation of sulphate was not reversed in the presence of lysosomal-enzyme inhibitors, and there was no evidence in pulse-chase experiments of increased intracellular degradation of glycosaminoglycan chains before secretion. It is concluded that catabolin-treated cartilage synthesizes a smaller number of normal proteoglycan molecules.  相似文献   

9.
The culture of bovine synovial or capsular tissue generated proteoglycan-degrading activity. When these tissues were incubated with living or dead bovine articular cartilage significantly more proteoglycan-degrading activity was revealed. The activity was present in a soluble form and required protein synthesis for its generation. The conditioned medium did not contain matrixin activity, although experiments with proteinase inhibitors suggested that the activity was due to a metalloproteinase. Western blotting of the aggrecan fragments suggested cleavage of aggrecan within the interglobular domain at the "aggrecanase" site, but not at the major matrixin site. N-terminal sequencing confirmed cleavage of aggrecan at a number of glutamyl bonds, including the aggrecanase site in the interglobular domain. We conclude that cultured synovial or capsular tissue produces soluble aggrecanase and an enzyme which releases aggrecanase from cartilage, possibly by cleavage of a chondrocyte membrane-bound form of aggrecanase.  相似文献   

10.
In order to assess the therapeutic effects of PG201 (an ethanol extract from herbs) on osteoarthritis, we investigated whether PG201 could suppress the disease progression of collagenase-induced arthritis (CNIA) in rabbits. The right knees of rabbits were injected intra-articularly with collagenase, and the rabbits were orally treated with distilled water (DW), PG201 (200 mg/kg) or diclofenac (DCF, 10 mg/kg) once a day for 8 weeks. Oral administration of PG201 significantly suppressed the stiffness and bone space narrowing. Cartilage erosion and GAG release (p<0.01) were considerably reduced in the knee joints. As well, the mRNA expression of matrix degradation enzymes including MMP-1, -3, and -13 was decreased. On the contrary, the concentrations of TIMP-2 in the synovial fluids were considerably amplified in the PG201 treated group (p<0.01), but not in the DCF treated group. The pathologic inflammatory molecules involved in cartilage destruction such as IL-1beta, PGE2, and NO were also diminished by PG201. Taken together, these results indicate that PG201 has therapeutic effects on CNIA through the prominent protection of cartilage. PG201 indeed has great potential as a form of treatment for osteoarthritis.  相似文献   

11.
The object of this study was to determine whether changes in the synovial fluid (SF) induced by in vivo loading can alter the metabolic activity of chondrocytes in vitro, and, if so, whether insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) is responsible for this effect. Therefore, SF was collected from ponies after a period of box rest and after they had been exercised for a week. Normal, unloaded articular cartilage explants were cultured in 20% solutions of these SFs for 4 days and chondrocyte bioactivity was determined by glycosaminoglycan (GAG) turnover (i.e., the incorporation of 35SO4 into GAG and the release of GAG into the medium). Furthermore, the extent to which the bioactivity is IGF-I-dependent was determined in a cartilage explant culture in 20% SF, in the presence and absence of anti-IGF-I antibodies. In explants cultured in post-exercise SF, GAG synthesis was enhanced and GAG release was diminished when compared to cultures in pre-exercise SF. SF analysis showed that IGF-I and IGFBP-3 levels were increased in post-exercise SF. There was a positive correlation between IGF-I levels and proteoglycan synthesis, but no correlation between IGF-I levels and proteoglycan release. Addition of anti-IGF-I antibodies significantly inhibited stimulation of proteoglycan synthesis in explants cultured in SF with 40%. However, there was no difference in inhibition of proteoglycan synthesis between pre- and post-exercise SF which indicated that the relative contribution of IGF-I in the stimulating effect of SF did not change. Proteoglycan release was not influenced by the presence of anti-IGF-I antibodies. It is concluded that chondrocyte metabolic activity is at least partially regulated by changes in the SF induced by in vivo loading. Exercise altered the SF in a way that it had a favourable effect on cartilage PG content by enhancing the PG synthesis and reducing the PG breakdown. IGF-I is an important contributor to the overall stimulating effect of SF on cartilage metabolism. It is, however, unlikely that IGF-I is the only mediator in the exercise-induced increase in this stimulating effect.  相似文献   

12.
Human articular chondrocytes in culture produced large amounts of specific mammalian collagenase, gelatinase and proteoglycanase when exposed to dialysed supernatant medium derived from cultured human blood mononuclear cells (mononuclear cell factor) or to conditioned medium, partially purified by fractionation with ammonium sulphate (60–90% fraction), from cultures of human synovial tissue (synovial factor). Human chondrocytes and synovial cells also released into culture medium an inhibitor of collagenase of apparent molecular weight about 30 000, which appeared to be similar to the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases synthesised by tissues in culture. The amounts of free collagenase inhibitor were reduced in culture media from chondrocytes or synovial cells exposed to mononuclear cell factor or synovial factor. While retinol inhibited the production of collagenase brought about by mononuclear cell factor or synovial factor, it restored the levels of inhibitor, which were reduced in the presence of mononuclear cell factor or synovial factor. Dexamethasone markedly reduced the production of collagenase by synovial cells, while only partially inhibiting factor-stimulated collagenase production by chondrocytes. Addition of puromycin as an inhibitor of protein synthesis reduced the amounts of both collagenase and inhibitor to control or undetectable levels.  相似文献   

13.
Human blood derived mononuclear cell (MC) cultures required concanavalin A (Con A) stimulation to synthesize and secrete into the medium high levels of a protease-resistant proteoglycan (PG) containing predominantly chondroitin sulfate (CS), which was elaborated largely by T-cells in culture. PG and DNA synthesis were studied in MC cultures in the absence and presence of Con A as well as serum and some biologically active polypeptide factors. In the presence of Con A, stimulation of PG synthesis was substantially greater in T-cell enriched cultures than in B-cell enriched cultures. DNA synthesis was also stimulated in the presence of Con A. This stimulation was concentration-dependent, but required the presence of serum for additional responses. DNA and cell proliferation were stimulated by interleukin-2 (IL-2), but PG production was not stimulated by conditioned media, IL-1, IL-2, IL-3, or transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta). Our results indicate that the elaboration of PG from T-cells of human MC is independent of the effects of regulatory peptides on cell proliferation and DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Current evidence suggests that interactions between the subchondral bone and the articular cartilage of mammalian diarthrodial joints may occur through the action of bone-associated peptide factors. However, there is no suitable organ culture model for studying these interactions. This study defines a long-term tissue culture system where the articular cartilage is coupled to the adjacent subchondral bone obtained from the proximal ends of bovine metacarpals. Autoradiography done over 3 mo., by utilizing [35S]SO4 incorporation into cartilage proteoglycan (PG) and a procedure for cutting non-decalcified bone, demonstrated similar numbers of silver grains over chondrocytes in all cartilage zones, including the bone-cartilage interface. Newly synthesized PG (NSPG) from the cartilage of the “coupled” system over a 3-wk period was primarily of large hydrodynamic size (Kav of 0.34). Comparable bovine articular and nasal cartilage slice systems, incubated for short periods of time, yielded similar and somewhat larger NSPG, respectively. Labeled chondroitin sulphate PG accumulating in the medium of primary chondrocyte monolayer cultures, derived from the cartilage of the coupled system at 0, 1, 2, and 3 wk, revealed two polydisperse subpopulations (Kav of 0.30 to 0.38 and 0.51 to 0.68). We conclude that this coupled bone-cartilage system is viable for prolonged periods, is suitable for studies on the metabolism of articular cartilage PGs, and seems to have some advantages over the cultured articular cartilage slice system.  相似文献   

15.
Elevated fibronectin (Fn) and Fn fragment concentrations are found in the synovial fluid of osteoarthritic and rheumatoid arthritic patients. Fn has been shown to affect expression of chondrocytic matrix proteins, and Fn fragments have been shown to elevate gene expression of neutral proteinases in synoviocytes. For these reasons, we tested the effects of Fn fragments on protease release and resultant proteoglycan release from cartilage in serum-free bovine articular cartilage explant cultures. We have found that 1 microM amino-terminal 29- and 50-kDa gelatin-binding Fn fragments caused over a 50-fold enhancement of gelatinolytic and collagenolytic proteinase release with a 23-fold enhancement of proteoglycan (PG) release. Release was significant at fragment concentrations as low as 20 nM. An integrin-binding 140-kDa fragment mixture was the least active fragment, whereas native Fn had little activity. The relative activities of the fragments correlated with their relative abilities to bind to cartilage. The RGDS integrin-recognition peptide also caused release, although sequence mutants did not. PG release was blocked by actinomycin D, cycloheximide, and deoxyglucose. Fn fragment-mediated PG release was decreased in 10% serum by over 10-fold but was still 2-fold greater than in controls. In the presence of insulin-like growth factor-1, PG release was as great as without serum. We suggest that Fn fragments, as found in diseased synovial fluid, may contribute to protease-mediated damage to cartilage.  相似文献   

16.
The role of cyclic AMP in the regulation of cartilage macromolecule synthesis in vitro was studied in pelvic cartilage from 10-12 day chick embryos. Incubation of cartilages in medium containing 0.5 mM cyclic AMP resulted in a 30% inhibition of 35SO4-2, [3H]leucine and [3H]uridine incorporation into proteoglycan, total protein and RNA, respectively. Higher concentrations of cyclic AMP had no greater effects. In contrast, butyrylated cyclic AMP derivatives (0.5-5.0 mM) added to the incubation medium stimulated (50-100%) the incorporation of these radiolabeled precursors into cartilage macromolecules. Theophylline, in concentrations (0.1-0.5 mM) which raise intracellular cyclic AMP, also increases the incorporation of radiolabeled precursors into macromolecules. The data indicate that exogenous cyclic AMP and butyrylated cyclic AMP derivatives have paradoxical effects on cartilage macromolecule synthesis. Butyrylated cyclic AMP derivatives, not exogenous cyclic AMP, mimic the effects of intracellular cyclic AMP. Incubation of embryonic chicken cartilage with exogenous cyclic AMP results in the extracellular degradation of the cyclic AMP to adenosine. Adenosine (0.125 mM) inhibits precursor incorporation into cartilage macromolecules. The metabolism of exogenous cyclic AMP generates sufficient adenosine to account for the observed inhibitory effects of exogenous cyclic AMP on cartilage macromolecule synthesis. Butyrylated cyclic AMP derivatives are not degraded during incubation with cartilage. The data indicate that cartilage is a tissue in which the effect of cyclic AMP is to stimulate anabolic processes.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of cycloheximide on chondroitin sulphate biosynthesis was studied in bovine articular cartilage maintained in culture. Addition of 0.4 mM-cycloheximide to the culture medium was followed, over the next 4h, by a first-order decrease in the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate into glycosaminoglycan (half-life, t 1/2 = 32 min), which is consistent with the depletion of a pool of proteoglycan core protein. Addition of 1.0 mM-benzyl beta-D-xyloside increased the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate and [3H]acetate into glycosaminoglycan, but this elevated rate was also diminished by cycloheximide. It was concluded that cycloheximide exerted two effects on the tissue; not only did it inhibit the synthesis of the core protein, but it also lowered the tissue's capacity for chondroitin sulphate chain synthesis. Similar results were obtained with chick chondrocytes grown in high-density cultures. Although the exact mechanism of this secondary effect of cycloheximide is not known, it was shown that there was no detectable change in cellular ATP concentration or in the amount of three glycosyltransferases (galactosyltransferase-I, N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase and glucuronosyltransferase-II) involved in chondroitin sulphate chain synthesis. The sizes of the glycosaminoglycan chains formed in the presence of cycloheximide were larger than those formed in control cultures, whereas those synthesized in the presence of benzyl beta-D-xyloside were consistently smaller, irrespective of the presence of cycloheximide. These results suggest that beta-D-xylosides must be used with caution to study chondroitin sulphate biosynthesis as an event entirely independent of proteoglycan core-protein synthesis, and they also indicate a possible involvement of the core protein in the activation of the enzymes of chondroitin sulphate synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Degradation of collagen network and proteoglycan (PG) macromolecules are signs of articular cartilage degeneration. These changes impair cartilage mechanical function. Effects of collagen degradation and PG depletion on the time-dependent mechanical behavior of cartilage are different. In this study, numerical analyses, which take the compression-tension nonlinearity of the tissue into account, were carried out using a fibril reinforced poroelastic finite element model. The study aimed at improving our understanding of the stress-relaxation behavior of normal and degenerated cartilage in unconfined compression. PG and collagen degradations were simulated by decreasing the Young's modulus of the drained porous (nonfibrillar) matrix and the fibril network, respectively. Numerical analyses were compared to results from experimental tests with chondroitinase ABC (PG depletion) or collagenase (collagen degradation) digested samples. Fibril reinforced poroelastic model predicted the experimental behavior of cartilage after chondroitinase ABC digestion by a major decrease of the drained porous matrix modulus (-64+/-28%) and a minor decrease of the fibril network modulus (-11+/-9%). After collagenase digestion, in contrast, the numerical analyses predicted the experimental behavior of cartilage by a major decrease of the fibril network modulus (-69+/-5%) and a decrease of the drained porous matrix modulus (-44+/-18%). The reduction of the drained porous matrix modulus after collagenase digestion was consistent with the microscopically observed secondary PG loss from the tissue. The present results indicate that the fibril reinforced poroelastic model is able to predict specifically characteristic alterations in the stress-relaxation behavior of cartilage after enzymatic modifications of the tissue. We conclude that the compression-tension nonlinearity of the tissue is needed to capture realistically the mechanical behavior of normal and degenerated articular cartilage.  相似文献   

19.
This study investigated the effects of pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMFs) on proteoglycan (PG) metabolism of human articular cartilage explants from patients with osteoarthritis (OA). Human cartilage explants, recovered from lateral and medial femoral condyles, were classified according to the International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS) and graded based on Outerbridge scores. Explants cultured in the absence and presence of IL-1β were treated with PEMF (1.5 mT, 75 Hz) or IGF-I alone or in combination for 1 and 7 days. PG synthesis and release were determined. Results showed that explants derived from lateral and medial condyles scored OA grades I and III, respectively. In OA grade I explants, after 7 days exposure, PEMF and IGF-I significantly increased (35) S-sulfate incorporation 49% and 53%, respectively, compared to control, and counteracted the inhibitory effect of IL 1β (0.01 ng/ml). The combined exposure to PEMF and IGF-I was additive in all conditions. Similar results were obtained in OA grade III cartilage explants. In conclusion, PEMF and IGF-I augment cartilage explant anabolic activities, increase PG synthesis, and counteract the catabolic activity of IL-1β in OA grades I and III. We hypothesize that both IGF-I and PEMF have chondroprotective effects on human articular cartilage, particularly in early stages of OA.  相似文献   

20.
Dissected embryonic chick limbs release neutral metalloproteinases during endochondral bone development. These enzymes degrade cartilage proteoglycan and gelatin in culture medium. We found the enzymes active in the medium conditioned by explants of the region adjacent to the bone marrow cavity (cavity-surround). These enzymes degrade proteoglycan (PG) and/or gelatin. These spontaneously active enzymes are resistant to serum and tissue proteinase inhibitors, alpha 2-macroglobulin, and cartilage metalloproteinase inhibitor (TIMP). The other enzymes secreted from tarsus and bone marrow explants are mostly latent in the culture medium. Activated tarsus enzymes (PG degrading and gelatinolytic) are blocked by the above inhibitors. Activated marrow enzyme does not degrade PG but is resistant to those inhibitors. Cavity-surround enzymes may play an important role in embryonic osteogenesis of long bones because of their resistance to tissue and serum inhibitors. The in vivo mechanisms by which cavity-surround enzymes are activated are yet to be determined.  相似文献   

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