Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.6.4 (chondroitinase)
2,039 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mononuclear cells from BALB/c mice with progressive polyarthritis and spondylitis induced by injection of fetal human articular cartilage proteoglycan (PG) were used to transfer arthritis by intravenous injection into irradiated, nonimmunized syngeneic mice. Successful transfer of arthritis to BALB/c mice required the injection of lymphocytes from mice with arthritis, along with 50 micrograms of human fetal PG, or lymphocytes stimulated in vitro with either fetal human PG or with mouse cartilage PG. In addition, interleukin-2 or immune sera from animals with arthritis significantly reduced the time to onset of transferred disease. The onset of adoptively transferred arthritis, using cells and antigen, from the time of the first injection (38.2 +/- 18.2 days, mean +/- SD) was shortened if lymphocytes from mice with transferred arthritis were reinjected (retransferred) into other, irradiated syngeneic mice (6.1 +/- 2.6 days). The appearance of autoreactive antibodies to mouse cartilage PG in the sera of mice with adoptively transferred arthritis (secondary or tertiary) preceded the appearance of the first clinical symptoms by a few days. The transfer of arthritis was blocked by pretreatment of donor (arthritic) lymphocytes with either anti-T cell or anti-B cell antibodies and complement. Exposure of mononuclear cells from mice with arthritis to PG, and its removal prior to transfer, also resulted in transfer of the arthritis. PG-induced arthritis was not transferred to nonirradiated mice, nor to irradiated mice injected with lymphocytes from animals with primary arthritis without chondroitinase ABC-digested fetal human PG. Arthritis never developed after injection of immune sera from mice with arthritis (without cells), nor when cells of nonarthritic animals were used with chondroitinase ABC-digested fetal human PG, with or without interleukin-2.
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PMID:Proteoglycan-induced polyarthritis and spondylitis adoptively transferred to naive (nonimmunized) BALB/c mice. 219 63

Intraperitoneal injection of human fetal cartilage proteoglycan (depleted of chondroitin sulfate) in Freund's complete or incomplete adjuvant induces a chronic erosive polyarthritis and spondylitis in all female BALB/c mice. This occurrence is strain-specific but not haplotype-specific, and it is sex-related. The development of the arthritis is associated with the natural presence of cellular immunity to the immunizing antigen and to chondroitinase ABC-treated mouse cartilage proteoglycan. In addition, relatively more antibody to the immunizing proteoglycan is elicited in arthritic mice, and antibodies are produced that cross-react with native mouse proteoglycan. This combination of immune responses is not observed in mice that do not develop arthritis. Associated with the arthritis is the development of cytotoxicity to mouse chondrocytes and, in some animals, of rheumatoid factor, immune deposits in joint tissues and kidneys, and the production of autoantibodies to mouse type II collagen. These observations might be related to our earlier demonstration that immunity to human cartilage proteoglycan is observed in some patients with ankylosing spondylitis.
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PMID:Immunity to cartilage proteoglycans in BALB/c mice with progressive polyarthritis and ankylosing spondylitis induced by injection of human cartilage proteoglycan. 356 22