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Issue title: 2nd International Symposium on Mechanobiology: Cartilage and Chondrocyte. Paris, France, April 2001
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Martin, James A. | Buckwalter, Joseph A.
Affiliations: University of Iowa Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Iowa City, IA, USA
Note: [] Address for correspondence: Joseph Buckwalter, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, 01008 JPP, University of Iowa, 200 Hawkins Drive, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA. Tel.: 319 356 2595; Fax: 319 356 8999; E‐mail: joseph‐buckwalter@uiowa.edu.
Abstract: Although osteoarthritis (OA) is not an inevitable consequence of aging, a strong association exists between age and increasing incidence of OA. We hypothesized that this association is due to in vivo articular cartilage chondrocyte senescence which causes an age‐related decline in the ability of the cells to maintain articular cartilage, that is, increasing age increases the risk of OA because chondrocytes lose their ability to replace their extracellular matrix. To test this hypothesis, we measured senescence markers in human articular cartilage chondrocytes from 27 donors ranging in age from one to 87 years. The markers included expression of the senescence‐associated enzyme β‐galactosidase, mitotic activity measured by 3H‐thymidine incorporation, and telomere length. β‐galactosidase expression increased with age (r=0.84, p=0.0001) while mitotic activity and mean telomere length declined (r=−0.774, p=0.001 and r=−0.71, p=0.0004, respectively). Decreasing telomere length was strongly correlated with increasing expression of β‐galactosidase and decreasing mitotic activity. These findings help explain the previously reported age related declines in chondrocyte synthetic activity and responsiveness to anabolic growth factors and indicate that in vivo articular cartilage chondrocyte senescence is responsible, at least in part, for the age related increased incidence of OA. The data also imply that people vary in their risk of developing OA because of differences in onset of chondrocyte senescence; and, the success of chondrocyte transplantation procedures performed to restore damaged articular surfaces in older patients could be limited by the inability of older chondrocytes to form new cartilage. New efforts to prevent the development or progression of OA might include strategies that delay the onset of chondrocyte senescence or replace senescent cells.
Journal: Biorheology, vol. 39, no. 1-2, pp. 145-152, 2002
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