ABSTRACT
Evidence has previously been presented that monocytes and macrophages produce urokinase-type plasminogen activator. We have shown for the first time that human monocytes, when stimulated appropriately in vitro, can produce tissue type-plasminogen activator (t-PA) of 70 kD. Detection of t-PA mRNA was consistent with the biochemical and immunological characterization of t-PA produced by human monocytes.
Subject(s)
Monocytes/metabolism , Tissue Plasminogen Activator/biosynthesis , Biological Assay , Blotting, Northern , Cells, Cultured , Culture Media , Humans , Lipopolysaccharides/pharmacology , RNA, Messenger/metabolismABSTRACT
Cytokines capable of stimulating cartilage resorption have frequently been identified as 'interleukin-1 (IL-1)-like' peptides. In this study for the first time we have employed homogeneous recombinant IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta in an all-human culture system to define the effects of IL-1 on articular cartilage and chondrocytes in culture. Recombinant IL-1 (10-100 U/ml) could stimulate cartilage resorption, although the maximum degree of tissue breakdown rarely reached the levels obtained when cartilage was treated with crude mononuclear-cell conditioned medium or all-trans retinoic acid (1 microM) over a similar time course. Levels of plasminogen activator (PA) activity, a neutral proteinase which may contribute to cartilage destruction in arthritis, increased markedly in the cartilage/chondrocyte culture supernatants and in the chondrocyte cell layers in response to the stimulation of cultures with recombinant IL-1 (1-100 U/ml). Elevated levels of PA activity were detectable after 4-8 h stimulation of the chondrocytes with IL-1 while characterization of the PA activities indicated that both types of PA activity were expressed, viz. urokinase-type PA (u-PA) and tissue-type PA (t-PA). Both IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta could elicit these responses and their effects were comparable for a given dose. These studies show definitively that pure IL-1, free from contaminating cytokines, is capable of inducing human cartilage resorption and stimulating the expression of two types of PA activity by chondrocytes. In contrast to IL-1, retinoic acid increased the detectable levels of only u-PA in the chondrocyte cell layers. Chondrocyte u-PA may have an important role in cartilage degradative processes since it is one of the few neutral proteinases now known to be increased in activity in retinoid-stimulated cartilage.