|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Characterization of and osteoarthritis susceptibility in ADAMTS-4-knockout mice.

First Author  Glasson SS Year  2004
Journal  Arthritis Rheum Volume  50
Issue  8 Pages  2547-58
PubMed ID  15334469 Mgi Jnum  J:98327
Mgi Id  MGI:3577989 Doi  10.1002/art.20558
Citation  Glasson SS, et al. (2004) Characterization of and osteoarthritis susceptibility in ADAMTS-4-knockout mice. Arthritis Rheum 50(8):2547-58
abstractText  OBJECTIVE: To determine the importance of the enzymatic activity of ADAMTS-4 in normal growth and development and to evaluate the role of ADAMTS-4 in the progression of osteoarthritis (OA). METHODS: We generated catalytic domain-deleted ADAMTS-4-transgenic mice and performed extensive gross and histologic analyses of various organs. The mice were challenged by surgical induction of joint instability leading to OA, to determine the importance of the enzymatic activity of ADAMTS-4 in the progression of the disease. The response of wild-type (WT) and ADAMTS-4-knockout (ADAMTS-4-KO) articular cartilage to interleukin-1 and retinoic acid challenge in vitro was also evaluated. RESULTS: ADAMTS-4-KO mice up to 1 year of age exhibited no gross or histologic abnormalities in 36 tissue sites examined. Despite evidence of ADAMTS-4 expression and activity in growth plates of WT mice, catalytic silencing of this proteinase caused no abnormalities in skeletal development, growth, or remodeling. There was no effect of ADAMTS-4 knockout on the progression or severity of OA 4 weeks or 8 weeks after surgical induction of joint instability. Enzymatic cleavage of aggrecan at the TEGE(373-374)ARGS site was clearly evident after exposure of articular cartilage from ADAMTS-4-KO mice to inflammatory cytokines. CONCLUSION: Although expression of the ADAMTS-4 gene has been found in many tissues throughout the body, deletion of enzymatic activity did not appear to have any effect on normal growth and physiology. Our study provides evidence that ADAMTS-4 is the primary aggrecanase in murine growth plates; however, deletion of its enzymatic activity did not affect normal long bone remodeling. Our results also lead to the hypothesis that, in the mouse, ADAMTS-4 is not the primary enzyme responsible for aggrecan degradation at the TEGE(373-374)ARGS site. The elucidation of the relative importance of ADAMTS-4 in the pathologic process of human OA will require examination of human OA tissues and evidence of disease modification in patients following therapeutic intervention.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

4 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression