Please check your email for the verification action. You may continue to use the site and you are now logged in, but you will not be able to return to the site in future until you confirm your email address.
Introduction and Aims: To establish whether basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) plays a role in the changes in chondrocyte metabolism exhibited in human osteoarthritis (OA).
Method: BFGF and its receptor was localised by immunohistochemistry within human OA. The results from OA tissue graded ‘early’ and ‘advanced’ were compared. This was correlated with the identification of proliferating chondrocytes (using by localising PCNA) and dead/dying chondrocytes (using the TUNEL technique).
Results: Results showed that bFGF and its receptor were strongly localised around chondrocytes in proliferating clusters in ‘early’ OA, whereas no bFGF was detected in ‘advanced’ OA. In addition, a loss of bFGF activity in ‘advanced’ OA correlated with the identification of large numbers of dead/dying chondrocytes.
Conclusion: Results suggest that high levels of bFGF activity in OA play an important role in chondrocyte proliferation and the formation of chondrocyte clusters. In addition, the loss of this activity appears to be directly related to an increase in cell death in ‘advanced’ OA, suggesting that bFGF acts as a ‘survival’ factor in this tissue. The more we understand about the metabolic changes in chondrocytes during OA, the closer we come to delaying or preventing this debilitating joint disease.