The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis

The pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA) is complex, but likely involves destruction of articular cartilage by endogenous enzymes (Dingle 1979). Factors controlling this are not well understood. Cetabolin, a 21,000 molecular weight peptide structurally end functionally related to interleukin-1, stimu...

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Main Author: Sabiston, C. Paul
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24909
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-249092018-01-05T17:42:49Z The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis Sabiston, C. Paul Osteoarthritis Catabolin Interleukin-1beta The pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA) is complex, but likely involves destruction of articular cartilage by endogenous enzymes (Dingle 1979). Factors controlling this are not well understood. Cetabolin, a 21,000 molecular weight peptide structurally end functionally related to interleukin-1, stimulates living but not killed chondrocytes in vitro to degrade their matrix (Fell and Jubb 1977, Saklatvala et al. 1983), suggesting it is not itself a degradative enzyme but functions as a control factor. The work in this thesis investigated the possible role of cetabolin in the pethogenesis of OA by measuring catabolin production by cultures of synovium excised from the canine anterior cruciate ligament transection model of OA. Normal cenine synovium in culture was shown to produce a factor which can stimulate the release of glycoseminoglycens from living cenine articular cartilage in culture. The total emount of cetebolin produced by cultures of synovium from experimentally induced OA synovium is statistically significantly greater (p<0.05) than that produced by normal synovium. When calculated per gram of synovium, there was no statistically significant difference. This suggests that a possible role for cetebolin in the pathogenesis of OA might be related to the degree of synovial hypertrophy. Medicine, Faculty of Graduate 2010-05-22T17:35:54Z 2010-05-22T17:35:54Z 1985 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24909 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Osteoarthritis
Catabolin
Interleukin-1beta
spellingShingle Osteoarthritis
Catabolin
Interleukin-1beta
Sabiston, C. Paul
The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis
description The pathogenesis of osteoarthritis (OA) is complex, but likely involves destruction of articular cartilage by endogenous enzymes (Dingle 1979). Factors controlling this are not well understood. Cetabolin, a 21,000 molecular weight peptide structurally end functionally related to interleukin-1, stimulates living but not killed chondrocytes in vitro to degrade their matrix (Fell and Jubb 1977, Saklatvala et al. 1983), suggesting it is not itself a degradative enzyme but functions as a control factor. The work in this thesis investigated the possible role of cetabolin in the pethogenesis of OA by measuring catabolin production by cultures of synovium excised from the canine anterior cruciate ligament transection model of OA. Normal cenine synovium in culture was shown to produce a factor which can stimulate the release of glycoseminoglycens from living cenine articular cartilage in culture. The total emount of cetebolin produced by cultures of synovium from experimentally induced OA synovium is statistically significantly greater (p<0.05) than that produced by normal synovium. When calculated per gram of synovium, there was no statistically significant difference. This suggests that a possible role for cetebolin in the pathogenesis of OA might be related to the degree of synovial hypertrophy. === Medicine, Faculty of === Graduate
author Sabiston, C. Paul
author_facet Sabiston, C. Paul
author_sort Sabiston, C. Paul
title The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis
title_short The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis
title_full The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis
title_fullStr The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis
title_full_unstemmed The role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis
title_sort role of catabolin in experimental osteoarthritis
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24909
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