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Vol. 290, Issue 2, 587-593, August 1999
Department of Bone and Cartilage Biology, SmithKline Beecham
Pharmaceuticals, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania
The effects of hymenialdisine (SK&F 108752) were evaluated on
interleukin-1 (IL-1)-induced proteoglycan (PG) degradation, PG
synthesis, nitric oxide (NO) production, and inducible nitric oxide
synthase (iNOS) gene expression in bovine articular cartilage (BAC)
and/or cartilage-derived chondrocytes. Cartilage disks from 0- to
3-month-old calves were treated with IL-1
or retinoic acid. PG
release was determined by measuring glycosaminoglycan release, and
nitrite production was measured as a readout for NO. Inhibition of iNOS
gene expression was measured by Northern blot analysis in
IL-1
-stimulated, cartilage-derived chondrocytes. To measure PG
synthesis, chondrocytes were established in alginate beads and treated
with hymenialdisine, and then [35S]sulfate incorporation
into PGs was determined. Hymenialdisine inhibited IL-1
-stimulated PG
breakdown in BAC in a dose-related manner with an IC50 of
approximately 0.6 µM. Herbimycin, a protein tyrosine kinase
inhibitor, also inhibited PG breakdown, whereas RO 32-0432, a protein
kinase C inhibitor, had no effect. Both hymenialdisine and herbimycin
also were able to inhibit retinoic acid-stimulated PG release.
IL-1
-stimulated NO production in BAC was inhibited by hymenialdisine
and herbimycin at similar concentrations. The effect on iNOS gene
expression was determined by Northern blot analysis in chondrocytes
grown in monolayer, and inhibition by hymenialdisine was observed with
an IC50 of approximately 0.8 µM. In chondrocytes cultured
in alginate beads, IL-1
inhibited PG synthesis, whereas
hymenialdisine stimulated synthesis at low concentrations (0.6 and 1.25 µM), and higher doses (2.5 µM) were not stimulatory. Compounds with
this profile may have utility in the treatment of osteoarthritis.