Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis

Currently there are no disease-modifying osteoarthritis drugs (DMOADs) available and the treatment for osteoarthritis (OA) is still based on minimising symptoms. Commonly used drugs for OA have health hazards from long and short term use and has led to patients using alternatives therapies such as n...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Islam, Purba
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59374/
_version_ 1848799620588634112
author Islam, Purba
author_facet Islam, Purba
author_sort Islam, Purba
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Currently there are no disease-modifying osteoarthritis drugs (DMOADs) available and the treatment for osteoarthritis (OA) is still based on minimising symptoms. Commonly used drugs for OA have health hazards from long and short term use and has led to patients using alternatives therapies such as nutraceuticals. In this study, three natural phenols (resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin) were compared with commonly used drugs used for treating OA; phenylbutazone (NSAID) and prednisolone (corticosteroid) and a nitric oxide inhibitor marker (S-ethylisothiourea) in an IL-1β stimulated explant culture. The treatments at 100 µg/ml were assessed for their ability to inhibit inflammatory markers of OA (nitric oxide, PGE2, glycosaminoglycan, cell viability). Resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin showed 100% nitric oxide inhibition similar to S-ethylisothiourea. Piceatannol was the only treatment which showed significant GAG inhibition. Cell viability for fresh, control, piceatannol (in the presence of IL-1β) and resveratrol (in the presence of IL-1β) treated cartilage were 83.9 ± 0.98 %, 76.8 ± 2.59 %, 78.8 ±3.57 % and 63.1 ± 4.35 % respectively. In a dose-response stimulated cartilage explant study, piceatannol and quercetin significantly inhibited nitric oxide at a concentration range of 1-300 µg/ml, whereas for resveratrol it was 10-300 µg/ml. Effective inhibition of GAG breakdown for resveratrol and quercetin was in a range of 10-30 µg/ml in the stimulated cartilage explant. The IC50 for inhibition by piceatannol of GAG breakdown was 2 µg/ml. Inhibition of PGE2 production appears to be obscured by the vehicle (1% DMSO) used to dissolve the treatments. This study suggests that nitric oxide is not playing a major role in GAG breakdown and cell death in the stimulated equine cartilage explant. Moreover, in this study, it was observed that GAG breakdown does not appear to initiate cell death at least at the early stages of an OA-like condition. Resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin may be potential DMOAD candidates to treat OA. Further studies on their beneficial effects especially in vivo should be compared against novel OA-modulators (such as GLPG1972) which are currently in clinical trials as they may offer a far cheaper therapeutic alternative.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:38:34Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-59374
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:38:34Z
publishDate 2019
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-593742025-02-28T14:42:03Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59374/ Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis Islam, Purba Currently there are no disease-modifying osteoarthritis drugs (DMOADs) available and the treatment for osteoarthritis (OA) is still based on minimising symptoms. Commonly used drugs for OA have health hazards from long and short term use and has led to patients using alternatives therapies such as nutraceuticals. In this study, three natural phenols (resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin) were compared with commonly used drugs used for treating OA; phenylbutazone (NSAID) and prednisolone (corticosteroid) and a nitric oxide inhibitor marker (S-ethylisothiourea) in an IL-1β stimulated explant culture. The treatments at 100 µg/ml were assessed for their ability to inhibit inflammatory markers of OA (nitric oxide, PGE2, glycosaminoglycan, cell viability). Resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin showed 100% nitric oxide inhibition similar to S-ethylisothiourea. Piceatannol was the only treatment which showed significant GAG inhibition. Cell viability for fresh, control, piceatannol (in the presence of IL-1β) and resveratrol (in the presence of IL-1β) treated cartilage were 83.9 ± 0.98 %, 76.8 ± 2.59 %, 78.8 ±3.57 % and 63.1 ± 4.35 % respectively. In a dose-response stimulated cartilage explant study, piceatannol and quercetin significantly inhibited nitric oxide at a concentration range of 1-300 µg/ml, whereas for resveratrol it was 10-300 µg/ml. Effective inhibition of GAG breakdown for resveratrol and quercetin was in a range of 10-30 µg/ml in the stimulated cartilage explant. The IC50 for inhibition by piceatannol of GAG breakdown was 2 µg/ml. Inhibition of PGE2 production appears to be obscured by the vehicle (1% DMSO) used to dissolve the treatments. This study suggests that nitric oxide is not playing a major role in GAG breakdown and cell death in the stimulated equine cartilage explant. Moreover, in this study, it was observed that GAG breakdown does not appear to initiate cell death at least at the early stages of an OA-like condition. Resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin may be potential DMOAD candidates to treat OA. Further studies on their beneficial effects especially in vivo should be compared against novel OA-modulators (such as GLPG1972) which are currently in clinical trials as they may offer a far cheaper therapeutic alternative. 2019-12-11 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59374/1/Purba%20Islam%204246463%2030102019.pdf Islam, Purba (2019) Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. osteoarthritis nutraceuticals equine cartilage explant
spellingShingle osteoarthritis
nutraceuticals
equine cartilage explant
Islam, Purba
Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis
title Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis
title_full Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis
title_fullStr Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis
title_full_unstemmed Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis
title_short Effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis
title_sort effects of resveratrol, piceatannol and quercetin in an equine cartilage explant model for potential use in treating osteoarthritis
topic osteoarthritis
nutraceuticals
equine cartilage explant
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/59374/