𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Immunohistochemical analysis of type X-collagen expression in osteoarthritis of the hip joint

✍ Scribed by Norbert Boos; Andreas G. Nerlich; Irmagard Wiest; Klaus von der Mark; Reinhold Ganz; Max Aebi


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
878 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0736-0266

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Conflicting data have been reported on the spatial distribution of type X‐collagen expression in osteoarthritis, and no concise data exist on a possible correlation between type X‐collagen expression and clinical and radiological alterations. Well defined clinical and radiological data were compared with histopathological and immunohistochemical findings to investigate the expression of type‐X collagen in osteoarthritis of the hip joint. Femoral heads were obtained in toto from 11 patients undergoing routine hip arthroplasty for femoral neck fractures (n = 3) or osteoarthritis (n = 8) and from 13 patients (age: 12 days to 69 years) without any evidence of hip‐joint pathology. Whole coronal sections from the femoral head were decalcified for routine histology and immunohistochemical analysis with use of type‐specific monoclonal antibodies to type‐X collagen. Our results demonstrate that type‐X collagen is consistently found in osteoarthritic cartilage and is absent from normal adult cartilage (including the region of calcified cartilage). Except for the occurrence of type‐X collagen in the middle zone of articular cartilage in advanced stages of osteoarthritis, there is no specific change in the staining pattern or intensity for the collagen during osteoarthritis, particularly when the staining is related to clinical and radiological parameters. Hardly more than 20% of the extracellular matrix stained for type‐X collagen; therefore, we suggest that, in most cases, this type of collagen may not play a direct biomechanical role in the weakening of osteoarthritic cartilage but rather may contribute indirectly to a disturbance of the disc biomechanics by altering matrix‐molecule interaction. However, expression of type‐X collagen may indicate a change in chondrocyte phenotype that consistently coincides with the formation of chondrocyte clusters, one of the first alterations in osteoarthritis visible on histologic examination.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Expression of type-X collagen in osteoar
✍ Gordon D. Walker; Mark Fischer; James Gannon; Roby C. Thompson Jr.; Theodore R. 📂 Article 📅 1995 🏛 Elsevier Science 🌐 English ⚖ 949 KB

The present study was undertaken to examine how osteoarthritis affects the expression of type-X collagen, a hypertrophic chondrocyte-specific collagen in articular cartilage. A well characterized sheep polyclonal antiserum, as well as three mouse monoclonal antibodies against canine type-X collagen,

Pathogenesis of osteoarthritis-like chan
✍ K. Hu; L. Xu; L. Cao; C. M. Flahiff; J. Brussiau; K. Ho; L. A. Setton; I. Youn; 📂 Article 📅 2006 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 647 KB

## Abstract ## Objective To examine the pathogenetic mechanisms of osteoarthritis (OA)–like changes in Col9a1^−/−^ mice, which are deficient in type IX collagen. ## Methods Knee joints and temporomandibular joints (TMJs) from Col9a1^−/−^ mice and their wild‐type (Col9a1^+/+^) littermates were ex