Posttraumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA) is a well-recognized public health burden without any disease modifying treatment. This occurs despite noted advances in surgical care in the past 50 years. Mitochondrial oxidative damage pathways initiate PTOA after severe injuries like intraarticular fracture that often require surgery and contribute to PTOA after less severe injuries that may or may not require surgery like meniscal injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn orthopedic research, many studies have applied vitamin E as a protective antioxidant or used tert-butyl hydroperoxide to induce oxidative injury to chondrocytes. These studies often support the hypothesis that joint pathology causes oxidative stress and increased lipid peroxidation that might be prevented with lipid antioxidants to improve cell survival or function and joint health; however, lipid antioxidant supplementation was ineffective against osteoarthritis in clinical trials and animal data have been equivocal. Moreover, increased circulating vitamin E is associated with increased rates of osteoarthritis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExosomes have attracted attention due to their ability to promote intercellular communication leading to enhanced cell recruitment, lineage-specific differentiation, and tissue regeneration. The object of this study was to determine the effect of exosomes on cell homing and angiogenic differentiation for pulp regeneration. Exosomes (DPSC-Exos) were isolated from rabbit dental pulp stem cells cultured under a growth (Exo-G) or angiogenic differentiation (Exo-A) condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDetermine if oxidative damage increases in articular cartilage as a result of injury and matrix failure and whether modulation of the local redox environment influences this damage. Osteoarthritis is an age associated disease with no current disease modifying approaches available. Mechanisms of cartilage damage in vitro suggest tissue free radical production could be critical to early degeneration, but these mechanisms have not been described in intact tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose Of Review: This review will cover foundational studies and recent findings that established key concepts for understanding the importance of redox biology to chondrocyte mitochondrial function and osteoarthritis pathophysiology after injury.
Recent Findings: Articular chondrocyte mitochondria can be protected with a wide variety of antioxidants that will be discussed within a framework suggested by classic studies. These agents not only underscore the importance of thiol metabolism and associated redox function for chondrocyte mitochondria but also suggest complex interactions with signal transduction pathways and other molecular features of osteoarthritis that require more thorough investigation.
Immunology
August 2008
In response to inflammatory stimuli, monocytes/macrophages secrete greater quantities of the proinflammatory cytokines tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and IL-6. The inflammatory process and the innate immune response are related to the activation of several transcription factors, such as nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) and activator protein 1 (AP-1). The proteasome is a multimeric protease complex, which plays a vital role in several cellular functions, including the regulation of transcription factors like NF-kappaB.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticancer Res
January 2006
The in vivo and in vitro development of apoptosis induced by gamma-irradiation was studied in mouse peritoneal macrophages. The apoptosis index was measured by fluorescence microscopy and DNA electrophoresis. In vivo apoptosis was greatest eight days after 8 Gy total body gamma-irradiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Adriamycin (ADM) is a potent antitumor drug that induces apoptosis (AP) in tumor cells. AP is modulated by caspases and by mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) as well as by the mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsim). We studied the participation of these systems in peritoneal macrophages from ADM-treated mice.
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