Nucleotide pyrophosphohydrolase in human synovial fluid

1997 
Objective. To identify the molecular forms of ectonucleotide pyrophosphohydrolase (NTPPHase) in human synovial fluid (SF). Methods. We examined synovial fluids from 32 patients with various joint diseases [10 calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) deposition disease; 7 osteoarthritis (OA); 6 rheumatoid arthritis (RA): 3 after total knee arthroplasty (TKA); 6 olecranon bursa] and 3 normal joint fluids. Joint fluids were analyzed after sequential centrifugation for NTPPHase activity and by Western blot using polyclonal antibodies against 127 kDa porcine articular cartilage vesicle-associated NTPPHase and against PC- I and 58 kDa, 2 other ecto-NTPPHases. Lysate from human synoviocytes, porcine chondrocytes, and their conditioned media were examined using antibodies to these ecto-NTPPHases. Radiographs of joints from which fluid was obtained were graded for degenerative changes 0-4 using a standard method. Results. NTPPHase activity was found in all pathological and normal SF tested and correlated with the degree of radiographic degeneration (r = 0.55, p< 0.05). NTPPHase specific activity in ultracentrifugation pellets was highest in CPPD deposition disease fluids (p < 0.05). 127 kDa enzyme was found in both sedimentable and soluble fractions from CPPD, OA, TKA, and normal fluids, and was extensively degraded in all inflammatory fluids. Intact 115 kDa PC-1 was found only in the 2 CPPD fluids with the highest NTPPHase activity. 58 kDa enzyme was found in most fluids, predominantly in the soluble fraction. 127 kDa protein was identified in human synoviocyte conditioned media but not in cell lysate, while PC-1 and 58 kDa proteins were found in the cell lysate but not in the conditioned media. Conclusion. There was no disease specific association with any one ecto-NTPPHase. Total enzyme activity correlated with the degree of degenerative change. The specific activity of pelletable 127 kDa enzyme was higher in fluids containing CPPD crystals. All 3 ecto-NTPPHases or their presumed degradation products were detectable in some pathologic and normal fluids. A 200 kDa reactive band often accompanied reactivity to the 127 kDa enzyme. PC-1 and 127 kDa proteins were extensively degraded in inflammatory SF, while 58 kDa protein was not. The relative contribution of each of these enzymes to inorganic pyrophosphate production by human joint tissues remains unclear.
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