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Startseite Publikationen Gene expression profiling of serum- and interleukin-1beta-stimulated primary human adult articular chondrocytes--a molecular analysis based on chondrocytes isolated from one donor
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Gene expression profiling of serum- and interleukin-1beta-stimulated primary human adult articular chondrocytes--a molecular analysis based on chondrocytes isolated from one donor
| Publication Type | | Journal Article |
| Authors | | Thomas Aigner, L. McKenna, Alexander Zien, Z. Fan, Pia M. Gebhard, Ralf Zimmer |
| Year of Publication | | 2005 |
| Journal | | Cytokine |
| Volume | | 31 |
| Number | | 3 |
| Pages | | 227-240 |
| Keywords | | expressionlab@lmu |
| DOI | | 10.1016/j.cyto.2005.04.009 |
| Citation Key | | bioinflmu-321 |
| Document visibility | | Global publication list |
| Export | | BibTex |
Abstract
In order to understand the cellular disease mechanisms of
osteoarthritic cartilage degeneration it is of primary importance to understand
both the anabolic and the catabolic processes going on in parallel in the
diseased tissue. In this study, we have applied cDNA-array technology (Clontech)
to study gene expression patterns of primary human normal adult articular
chondrocytes isolated from one donor cultured under anabolic (serum) and
catabolic (IL-1beta) conditions. Significant differences between the different in
vitro cultures tested were detected. Overall, serum and IL-1beta significantly
altered gene expression levels of 102 and 79 genes, respectively. IL-1beta
stimulated the matrix metalloproteinases-1, -3, and -13 as well as members of its
intracellular signaling cascade, whereas serum increased the expression of many
cartilage matrix genes. Comparative gene expression analysis with previously
published in vivo data (normal and osteoarthritic cartilage) showed significant
differences of all in vitro stimulations compared to the changes detected in
osteoarthritic cartilage in vivo. This investigation allowed us to characterize
gene expression profiles of two classical anabolic and catabolic stimuli of human
adult articular chondrocytes in vitro. No in vitro model appeared to be adequate
to study overall gene expression alterations in osteoarthritic cartilage. Serum
stimulated in vitro cultures largely reflected the results that were only
consistent with the anabolic activation seen in osteoarthritic chondrocytes. In
contrast, IL-1beta did not appear to be a good model for mimicking catabolic gene
alterations in degenerating chondrocytes.
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