| Literature DB >> 34930205 |
Ying Zhang1,2, Yudong Mu3, Ying He1, Zhengzheng Li1, Ge Mi1, Yinan Liu1, Meng Zhang1, Hui Wang1, Yiping Feng1, Qian Fang1, Tianyou Ma1, Xianghua Deng4, Jinghong Chen5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Kashin-Beck disease (KBD) is a chronic, deforming, endemic osteochondropathy that begins in patients as young as 2-3 years of age. The pathogenesis of KBD remains unclear, although selenium (Se) deficiency and T-2 toxin food contamination are both linked to the disease. In the present study, we evaluated transforming growth factor-β receptor (TGF-βR I and II) levels in clinical samples of KBD and in pre-clinical disease models.Entities:
Keywords: Kashin–Beck disease; Se-deficiency; T-2 toxin; TGF-β receptor I; TGF-β receptor II
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34930205 PMCID: PMC8690967 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-021-04939-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Donors Characteristics
| Number | Male/Female | Age (Mean ± SD) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control Donors | 8 | 4/4 | 5.6 ± 3.1 |
| KBD Donors | 8 | 4/4 | 5.2 ± 1.3 |
χgender2 = 0.000, Pgender = 1.000; t = 0.373; Page = 0.714
Fig. 1Schematic representation of Experimental animal
Fig. 2(A) A 15-year-old, female patient with KBD, manifested as enlarged phalangeal joints and shortened fingers. (B) H&E staining of articular cartilage and growth plate cartilage from the phalanges. “Red ghost” outlines of the chondrocytes can be seen in the deep zone (black arrow). No chondrocytes are present in the deep zone of cartilage (+)
Fig. 3Immunostaining of TGFβRI and TGFβRII in control and KBD cartilage (positive staining is brown, indicated with an arrow). (A) Staining of TGFβRI and TGFβRII in articular cartilage. (B) Staining of TGFβRI and TGFβRII in growth plate cartilage (n = 6; *p < 0.05)
Fig. 4Representative immunostaining showing TGFβRI and TGFβRII expression in the knee joints of rats assessed using immunohistochemistry (positive staining is red, indicated with an arrow). (A) TGFβRI staining in articular and growth plate cartilage. (B) TGFβRII staining in articular and growth plate cartilage
Fig. 5TGF-βRI and TGF-βRII protein expression levels in rat cartilage samples. (A) Representative images showing TGF-βRI and TGF-βRII protein expression in various samples. (B) Quantitative data of TGF-βRI and TGF-βRII protein expression levels in various samples. Results were normalized to GAPDH levels (n = 6; **p < 0.01). The gels were cropped from different parts of the same gel and transferred to membranes with different transfer times (semi-dry transfer system: GAPDH, 25 min, 15 V; TGFβRI/II, 40 min, 15 V)