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Dr. James Cook performs arthroscopy for treatment of arthritis
in the knee of one of his canine patients. Priscilla
Foster photo
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MU
Researchers
Identify
Genetic Culprits of Arthritis
By Christian Basi
Arthritis affects one in three Americans and
is the leading cause of disability in people over the age of 15,
according to the Arthritis Foundation. While doctors have been
able to treat the disease and offer tips to avoid it, University
of Missouri-Columbia researchers have identified telltale, genetic
signs that indicate the early onset of arthritis. Researchers
hope to identify arthritis as early as possible in an effort to
reverse its progression.
“There's no current cure for arthritis,
but that's because we can't diagnose the disease while it is in
a stage that is reversible,” said James Cook, a professor
of veterinary medicine
and surgery and the William C. Allen Endowed Scholar for Orthopaedic
Research. “While some researchers are looking at various
biomarkers in blood and other bodily fluids, we’ve identified
16 genes in the cartilage that may be involved with the onset
of the disease.”
Arthritis may occur due to injury, overloading
of the joint, or genetic and environmental causes. In his current
study, Cook is examining dogs that have the disease. While it
might take years for humans to develop arthritis, dogs develop
the signs and symptoms of the disease at a much faster rate. In
his study, Cook uses specific MRI, arthroscopy and biochemical
techniques to identify problems associated with arthritis, such
as bone and cartilage damage. Then he identifies the genetic changes
that correlate with the damage.
“The specific injury that we are studying leads to articular
cartilage degradation, or damage to the cartilage in the knee,” Cook said. “This degradation is the hallmark of osteoarthritis,
and while we can accurately assess clinical changes associated
with the degradation of arthritis, we cannot clinically assess
the initiating events that occur in the potentially reversible
stages of disease. Through our research, we have found specific
genes that are expressed in the areas where degradation will subsequently
occur, which may allow us to accurately predict the extent and
severity of how the arthritis will develop.”

Left: The purple tissue
is cartilage made in the lab from rabbit cells. Right: Dr.
Cook sends CT scans of each dog's knee to other researchers
who design a 3-D model of the joint area that needs to be
replaced.
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Cook is collaborating with Aaron Stoker, the
Robert B. Gordon Arthritis Research Fellow in the MU
Comparative Orthopaedic Laboratory (COL) and expert in cartilage
gene expression. Using the expertise in the COL and collaborations
with researchers from Virtual Scopics, LLC in Rochester, N.Y.,
Stoker and Cook are determining the extent of abnormal gene expression
in the knees of dogs and correlating it to MRI results, a clinically
relevant assessment of arthritis.
The implications of determining if a person will have arthritis
are enormous. Lifestyle changes could be started before the disease
even appears, preventing the mechanical grinding of bone from
starting. Physicians could preemptively prescribe pharmaceuticals
known to slow cartilage degeneration, and researchers could develop
new pharmaceuticals to interrupt the disease process.
Cook and Stoker have presented their research
at the Orthopaedic Research Society meeting, the Osteoarthritis
Research Society International meeting and the Veterinary Orthopaedic
Society meeting, and the data have been published in those proceedings.
An initial manuscript is also accepted for publication in the
Journal of Orthopaedic Research and Surgery. The research
is being funded by The Bob and Judi Reeves Endowment for Arthritis
Diagnostics, The Gordon Family Arthritis Research Endowment and
a $300,000 grant from Pfizer.
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Last Update:
November 15, 2007
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