PMID: 3746056Jun 1, 1986Paper

Possible involvement of prostaglandin endoperoxides in cartilage-synovial interactions

Nihon Seikeigeka Gakkai zasshi
K Yamamoto

Abstract

The depletion of proteoglycans in cartilage matrix is the beginning of cartilage breakdown. Prostaglandins and related compounds might play an important role in inhibition of cartilage metabolism under arthritic conditions. Prostaglandin endoperoxides, intermediate metabolites of arachidonic acid, are more potent chemical mediators than prostaglandins, but their action can only be demonstrated in cartilage co-incubated with synovial tissue, because they are short-lived and active only within a small restricted space. Human rheumatoid synovialis highly inhibited sulfation of cartilage matrix co-incubated. The inhibition of cartilage metabolism was released by indomethacin added to the co-incubating system, showing its responsiveness to indomethacin. The magnitude of inhibition was time-dependent and substantially greater than that by prostaglandin in cell-free rheumatoid synovial culture media. The results suggest a possible involvement of prostaglandin endoperoxides in potent inhibition of cartilage metabolism under arthritic conditions.

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