Kruisbloemige
groenten tegen gewrichtsproblemen.*
Kruisbloemige
groenten, zoals broccoli en andere koolsoorten blijken althans in het
laboratorium effectief te zijn in het voorkomen van gewrichtsproblemen.
Phytochemicals
may protect cartilage, prevent pain in joints
Johns
Hopkins researchers have discovered that plant-derived compounds known for their
ability to protect tissue also appear to block the activity of an enzyme that
triggers inflammation in joints. Their findings, based on experiments with human
cells in a lab, could lead to new arthritis treatments and better methods of
making artificial cartilage.
The discovery was detailed in a paper published in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
The findings came to light while the researchers were studying the wildly
different ways in which cells in human blood vessels and joints respond to
pressure gradients generated from liquid moving along their surface, a force
called shear stress. In cells that line blood vessels, the reaction to shear
stress is beneficial: the boosting of phase 2 enzymes that may protect the cells
from cancer-causing chemicals and other toxic agents. Yet in joints, the
response to high shear stress is potentially harmful: an increase in the levels
of COX-2 enzyme, which triggers inflammation and pain, and suppresses the
activity of phase 2 enzymes, ultimately causing the death of chondrocytic cells.
Healthy chondrocytes are responsible for the smooth functioning of joints. When
chondrocytes stop functioning properly, the result can be arthritis.
The divergent responses to shear stress prompted a series of experiments in a
Johns Hopkins lab supervised by Konstantinos Konstantopoulos, associate
professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and Agarwal-Masson Faculty
Scholar. His team knew that strenuous exercise or heavy exertion of muscles can
cause joints to increase the levels of harmful COX-2 enzyme. What would happen,
the researchers wondered, if the vulnerable chondrocyte cells in human joints
were first exposed to the beneficial phase 2 enzymes?
To find out, the researchers obtained compounds that boost the activity of
helpful phase 2 enzymes. They added these phase 2 inducers to a dish containing
the chondrocyte cells that are crucial to maintaining healthy joints. After 24
hours, the cells were subjected to a stress test designed to mimic aspects of
strenuous exercise on a joint as well as the hydrodynamic environment in a
bioreactor designed to generate artificial cartilage.
The results were surprising. "The beneficial phase 2 enzymes somehow seemed
to prevent the activation of the inflammatory COX-2 enzyme," said Zachary
R. Healy, a doctoral student in Konstantopoulos' lab and lead author of the
journal paper. "The phase 2 enzymes inhibited the inflammation and the
apoptosis -- the cellular suicide we'd observed."
Some prescription drugs like Vioxx keep COX-2 enzyme at bay by temporarily
blocking its ability to send the biochemical signals that set off pain and
inflammation. When the medication is stopped, however, the stockpiled COX-2
enzyme can resume its damaging ways. Unlike these traditional pain killers,
Healy said, the phase 2 enzyme inducers seemed to stop the increasing activity
of COX-2 enzyme.
"That means these compounds could be useful as a preventive measure,
perhaps before strenuous exercise," Healy said. "This has the
potential for stopping pain and inflammation before they start."
Although these experiments appeared to be the first to determine how phase 2
enzyme inducers affect chondrocytes, these compounds have been studied
extensively by researchers at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Paul Talalay,
the medical school's John Jacob Abel Distinguished Service Professor of
Pharmacology, has shown that phase 2 enzymes can detoxify certain cancer-causing
agents and damaging free radicals in tissue, including cells that line blood
vessels. He has isolated compounds in edible plants that boost production of
phase 2 enzymes. These phytochemicals can be found in cruciferous plants,
including broccoli.
Talalay provided one of the phase 2 inducers used in Healy's experiments. "This
was the first work done in applying these phytochemicals to chondrocytes, which
are constantly under the influence of forces because of the way we move our
joints," Talalay said. "The phase 2 inducers seemed to counteract the
effects of that stress by inhibiting the expression of COX-2 enzyme. It's
interesting to think that people may be able to obtain this benefit through
dietary components."
By showing a way to ward off inflammation and by providing insights into the
effects of shear stress, the new chondrocyte research may also aid tissue
engineers who are trying to grow artificial cartilage or seeking to revitalize
human cartilage in the lab. This is important because human bodies cannot make
new cartilage to replace tissue that's lost to injury or disease.
"More research is needed," said Konstantopoulos, who directed and
supervised the experiments. "But these discoveries could provide guidelines
for designing an ideal hydrodynamic environment in bioreactors for generating
functional cartilage as well as for the treatment of osteoarthritis."
Funding for the research was provided by a DuPont Young Professor Award, a
National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship and an Achievement
Reward for College Students Fellowship. Healy's co-authors on the PNAS paper
were Talalay, Konstantopoulos, Norman H. Lee of the Institute for Genomic
Research, Xiangqun Gao of the Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences
at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Mary B. Goldring of the Harvard
Institutes of Medicine, and Thomas W. Kensler of the Department of Environmental
Health Sciences in the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.(
Okt. 2005)