Publication | Open Access
Enhanced cleavage of type II collagen by collagenases in osteoarthritic articular cartilage.
972
Citations
55
References
1997
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringEnhanced CleavageImmunologyType Ii CollagenBiomedical EngineeringOrthopaedic SurgeryMusculoskeletal ResearchOsteoarthritic Articular CartilageIncreased Collagenase ActivityBone Morphogenic ProteinCartilage DegenerationOsteoarthritisInflammatory Rheumatic DiseaseMatrix BiologyRheumatoid ArthritisConnective Tissue DiseaseMechanobiologyRheumatologyMusculoskeletal TissueCartilage BiologyCell BiologyCollagenase Matrix MetalloproteinaseMedicineExtracellular Matrix
We demonstrate the direct involvement of increased collagenase activity in the cleavage of type II collagen in osteoarthritic human femoral condylar cartilage by developing and using antibodies reactive to carboxy-terminal (COL2-3/4C(short)) and amino-terminal (COL2-1/4N1) neoepitopes generated by cleavage of native human type II collagen by collagenase matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1 (collagenase-1), MMP-8 (collagenase-2), and MMP-13 (collagenase-3). A secondary cleavage followed the initial cleavage produced by these recombinant collagenases. This generated neoepitope COL2-1/4N2. There was significantly more COL2-3/4C(short) neoepitope in osteoarthritis (OA) compared to adult nonarthritic cartilages as determined by immunoassay of cartilage extracts. A synthetic preferential inhibitor of MMP-13 significantly reduced the unstimulated release in culture of neoepitope COL2-3/4C(short) from human osteoarthritic cartilage explants. These data suggest that collagenase(s) produced by chondrocytes is (are) involved in the cleavage and denaturation of type II collagen in articular cartilage, that this is increased in OA, and that MMP-13 may play a significant role in this process.
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