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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Comparison of phosphohydrolase activities from articular cartilage in calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease and primary osteoarthritis.

One abnormality in calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease (CPDD) which fosters consistently high synovial fluid pyrophosphate ion (PPi) and large accumulations of calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystals (Ca pyrophosphate) might be an aberration in chondrocytes involving elaboration of PPi and failure of its hydrolysis within cartilage matrix. Exploration of this hypothesis required further information on the phosphohydrolases in relevant human articular cartilages. Triton X-100 extracts of whole homogenized cartilage from 18 patients with primary osteoarthritis (OA), 10 patients with CPDD and secondary OA, as well as 6 "normal" subjects were partially purified by DE-52 chromatography and eluates studied for phosphohydrolase activity in a variety of substrates, inhibitors, and environmental conditions. Almost all the protein as well as crude alkaline phosphatase and pyrophosphatase activities were clustered in peaks designated I and II. Findings in CPDD cartilage not observed in OA controls were: 1) consistent alkaline phosphatase activity in the void volume of DE-52 columns, 2) high levels of 5'nucleotidase activity, 3) abundant generation of PPi by CPDD cartilage during in vitro incubation of cartilage extract fractions with ATP. This enzymatic behavior is likely to bear a regulatory relationship to PPi production by chondrocytes in CPDD.[1]

References

  1. Comparison of phosphohydrolase activities from articular cartilage in calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease and primary osteoarthritis. Tenenbaum, J., Muniz, O., Schumacher, H.R., Good, A.E., Howell, D.S. Arthritis Rheum. (1981) [Pubmed]
 
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