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a Academic
Rheumatology, University of Nottingham Clinical Sciences Building, City
Hospital, Nottingham NG5 1PB , b Vascular Biology Center, Medical College of
Georgia, Augusta, Georgia USA, c Department of Histochemistry, Imperial College
School of Medicine, Hammersmith Campus, London
Correspondence to: Dr Walsh
Accepted for publication 22 October 1999
OBJECTIVE
To determine
whether tissue angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) is increased in
synovia from patients with rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis or
chondromalacia patellae.
METHODS
Sections of
synovia from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (n = 7), osteoarthritis
(n = 7) or chondromalacia patellae (n = 6) were tested for
immunoreactivity for ACE, and for binding of the ACE inhibitor
[125I]351A. The amount of ACE was measured with computer
assisted image analysis as the proportion of synovial section area
occupied by ACE-immunoreactive cells, and the density of
[125I]351A binding.
RESULTS
[125I]351A
binding sites had characteristics of ACE and colocalised with ACE-like
immunoreactivity to microvascular endothelium and fibroblast-like
stromal cells in inflamed and non-inflamed human synovium. Stromal
[125I]351A binding densities (Beq) and the
fraction of synovial section area occupied by ACE-immunoreactivity
(fractional area) were higher in synovia from patients with rheumatoid
arthritis (Beq 28 amol/mm2, fractional area
0.21) than from those with osteoarthritis (Beq 9 amol/mm2, fractional area 0.10) or chondromalacia patellae
(Beq 9 amol/mm2, fractional area 0.09)(p < 0.05). Density of [125I]351A binding to stroma was
similar to that to blood vessels in rheumatoid arthritis, but less
dense than vascular binding in chondromalacia patellae and
osteoarthritis. Increases in [125I]351A binding densities
were attributable to increases in the numbers of binding sites, and
were consistent with an increase in the density of ACE bearing stromal cells.
CONCLUSION
ACE is
upregulated in synovial stroma in rheumatoid arthritis. Increased
tissue ACE may result in increased local generation of the
vasoconstrictor and mitogenic peptide angiotensin II and thereby
potentiate synovial hypoxia and proliferation in rheumatoid arthritis.
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