Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2132137 Experimental Cell Research 2006 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

The formation of cartilage takes place in vivo in an environment of reduced oxygen tension. To study the effect of hypoxia on the process of chondrogenesis, ATDC5 mouse chondroprogenitor cells were induced to differentiate by the addition of insulin and cultured under ambient and hypoxic conditions corresponding to 21% and 1% O2 in the gas phase, respectively. The production of extracellular proteoglycans as well as the transcriptional profile of 104 selected genes was determined by real-time RT-PCR. Hypoxia alone induced early chondrogenesis as evidenced by the synthesis of glycosaminoglycans and expression of aggrecan and collagen type II genes. Surprisingly, however, hypoxic incubation of insulin-treated cells delayed and suppressed the insulin-mediated early chondrogenesis and almost completely blocked hypertrophic differentiation. Analysis of the gene expression yielded several clues as to the mechanisms involved. In addition, a group of genes was identified that have not previously been associated with hypoxia, including Ak4, Akt3, Col X, Fmod, Ier3, IGFbp4, MafF, Mxi1, Rcor2, Rras, Sox6, Tnni2, Wnt5a, and Zfp313.

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