Retinoic acid-induced cartilage degradation is caused by cartilage cells
1991
Cartilage cubes, prepared from the proximal epiphyses of neonatal rat humeri and consisting of cartilage tissue only, were cultured in the presence of retinoic acid. The retinoid induced the loss of metachromatic staining with toluidine blue, which correlates with the loss of proteoglycan, followed by tissue degradation processes resulting in a distinct reduction of the cartilage mass. Histologically, fibroblast-like cells appeared within chondrones, indicating a transformation of chondroblasts. Focal tissue degradation was observed after only 2 days. Electron microscopically, the clustered cells within the zone of tissue degradation were rich in various lysosomal structures indicating their lytic activity. Cycloheximide and EDTA completely blocked the retinoic acid effects suggesting that protein synthesis was required and that metalloproteinases may be involved in the degradation processes. In conclusion, with the new test system described here we demonstrated that cartilage cells themselves performed the tissue degradation induced by retinoic acid.
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