Effect of retinoic acid on proliferation and differentiation of cultured chondrocytes in terminal differentiation.

1990 
: We obtained terminally differentiated chondrocytes in monolayer culture from chick embryonal growth plates, and examined the effect of retinoic acid on these cells. The cells treated with retinoic acid ceased type X collagen synthesis and showed decreased calcium incorporation into cell layers. Retinoic acid tended to stimulate proliferation of the cultured chondrocytes. It also increased DNA accumulation dose-dependently in the range from 1 nM to 1 microM. DNA synthesis in the growth phase and confluency was stimulated within 10 h after addition of 0.1 microM retinoic acid. [3H]Retinoic acid binding, which was inhibited by simultaneous addition of excess unlabeled retinoic acid, was detected in both the cytosolic and nuclear fractions of the chondrocytes. The retinoic acid binding capacity of the nuclear fraction was increased by pretreating the cells with retinoic acid. These results indicate that retinoic acid binds to both the cytosolic and nuclear fractions of cultured chondrocytes, and induces their proliferation and dedifferentiation.
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