Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology
Volume 22, Issue 2 , Pages 351-384, April 2008

Cartilage in normal and osteoarthritis conditions

  • Johanne Martel-Pelletier, PhD (Professor)

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Osteoarthritis Research Unit, University of Montreal Hospital Centre, Notre-Dame Hospital, 1560 Sherbrooke Street East, Montreal, Quebec H2L 4M1, Canada. Tel.: +1 514 890 8000x26658; Fax: +1 514 412 7582.
  • ,
  • Christelle Boileau, PhD (Doctor)
  • ,
  • Jean-Pierre Pelletier, MD (Professor)

Osteoarthritis Research Unit, University of Montreal Hospital Centre, Montreal, Canada

Genetics Unit, Shriner's Hospital for Children, Montreal, Canada

The preservation of articular cartilage depends on keeping the cartilage architecture intact. Cartilage strength and function depend on both the properties of the tissue and on their structural parameters. The main structural macromolecules are collagen and proteoglycans (aggrecan). During life, cartilage matrix turnover is mediated by a multitude of complex autocrine and paracrine anabolic and catabolic factors. These act on the chondrocytes and can lead to repair, remodeling or catabolic processes like those that occur in osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis is characterized by degradation and loss of articular cartilage, subchondral bone remodeling, and, at the clinical stage of the disease, inflammation of the synovial membrane. The alterations in osteoarthritic cartilage are numerous and involve morphologic and metabolic changes in chondrocytes, as well as biochemical and structural alterations in the extracellular matrix macromolecules.

Key words: anabolic, non-anabolic, and catabolic growth factors, biological markers, cartilage, collagens, cytokines, osteoarthritis, proteases, proteoglycans

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PII: S1521-6942(08)00013-2

doi:10.1016/j.berh.2008.02.001

Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology
Volume 22, Issue 2 , Pages 351-384, April 2008