1. Rat antigen-induced arthritis: cartilage alterations assessed with iodine-123-antileukoproteinase.
- Author
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Kinne RW, Meyer P, Gründer W, Buchner E, Palombo-Kinne E, Heinzel-Wieland R, Becker W, Wolf F, Kalden JR, and Burkhardt H
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Hindlimb, Knee Joint diagnostic imaging, Membrane Proteins pharmacokinetics, Myoglobin pharmacokinetics, Proteinase Inhibitory Proteins, Secretory, Radionuclide Imaging, Rats, Rats, Inbred Lew, Tissue Distribution, Arthritis, Experimental diagnostic imaging, Cartilage diagnostic imaging, Iodine Radioisotopes, Proteins pharmacokinetics, Radiopharmaceuticals, Serine Proteinase Inhibitors pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Imaging of cartilage alterations was attempted in joints of rats with chronic antigen-induced arthritis (AIA) using the cationic 123I-labeled serine proteinase inhibitor antileukoproteinase (123I-ALP; pI > 10), which selectively accumulates in normal cartilage, presumably through interaction with negatively charged proteoglycans., Methods: Iodine-123-ALP or 123I-myoglobin, a control protein of comparable size but with different isoelectric point (pI=7.3) was injected intravenously into normal or AIA rats. Joint accumulation was followed by scintigraphy for 14 hr. Tissue radioactivity was assessed by well-counter measurements after dissection. The content of charged molecules in articular cartilage was determined by toluidine blue staining; the degree of joint destruction was assessed in parallel by x-ray, ex vivo MRI and histopathology., Results: In intact articular cartilage, ALP accumulated to a significantly higher degree than myoglobin. This preferential accumulation was lost in rats with chronic AIA. The target-to-background ratio for 123I-ALP negatively correlated with the loss of toluidine blue staining in cartilage, which documents depletion of charged matrix molecules (r=-0.92, p < 0.01 at 4 hr; r=-0.97, p < 0.01 at 13 hr). ALP scintigraphy was sensitive in detecting cartilage alterations, even though the degree of joint destruction and inflammatory infiltration was mild, as demonstrated by x-ray, MRI and histopathology., Conclusion: In rat AIA, loss of ALP accumulation appears to document proteoglycan depletion in mildly altered arthritic cartilage. ALP scintigraphy may represent a functional assay for early, premorphological cartilage alterations in human arthritis as well.
- Published
- 1998