Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P01889 (ankylosing spondylitis)
5,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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.
...
PMID:Immunity to cartilage proteoglycans in BALB/c mice with progressive polyarthritis and ankylosing spondylitis induced by injection of human cartilage proteoglycan. 356 22

Immunization with chondroitinase ABC-digested fetal human cartilage proteoglycan and Freund's complete adjuvant induced polyarthritis and ankylosing spondylitis in female BALB/c mice. The initial external symptoms of the joint inflammation were swelling and redness. This was associated with edema of the synovium and periarticular tissues and gross proliferation of cells, which reached a peak during weeks 7-9 of the experiment. Mononuclear cell infiltration, with perivascular concentration and occlusion of small vessels, was common. Synovitis increased in severity, villous pannus developed, and erosions of bone, articular cartilage, and occasionally, growth plate were observed. The lumbar spine and the proximal intervertebral discs of the tail also exhibited inflammatory and degenerative changes. As the arthritis progressed, sometimes with acute inflammatory exacerbations, more joints became involved and, by the sixteenth to the twentieth weeks of the experiment, a progressive polyarthritis, with gross joint deformities and restricted function, developed in the majority of the limb joints. Clinical and morphologic features of the disease correlated well with radiologic analysis and with an increased deposition of 99mTc-methylene diphosphonate (determined by radionuclide imaging). The development of this arthritis was accompanied by the expression of cell-mediated and humoral immunity to the immunizing antigen. However, this immunity was also observed, although it was generally less well developed, in mice that received the intact or digested proteoglycan without adjuvant. These mice did not usually develop arthritis. Control mice that received only adjuvant did not develop arthritis.
...
PMID:Proteoglycan-induced arthritis in BALB/c mice. Clinical features and histopathology. 382 60