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1.
The effects of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and serum on proteoglycan synthesis by tissue explants from the fibrocartilaginous region of adult bovine tendon and by cells in culture from this region were assessed. The most characteristic effect of added TGF-beta on both explant tissue and cells in culture was enhanced synthesis of one small proteoglycan-biglycan. Lowered serum concentration diminished incorporation of Na2 35SO4 into proteoglycans. Added TGF-beta (1 ng/ml) stimulated cell proliferation, increased overall proteoglycan synthesis, and increased the length of glycosaminoglycan chains on all secreted proteoglycans. The effect of TGF-beta on cells in culture was highly consistent whereas explants from different animals showed greater variability in the response. It was concluded that TGF-beta did not specifically promote or maintain the cartilaginous nature of this tissue because supplementing medium with TGF-beta did not significantly alter the ratio of large/small proteoglycans synthesized by tissue explants. However, the observation of enhanced biglycan synthesis by TGF-beta suggests that TGF-beta could be involved in differentiation of regions of tendon subjected to compression, because compressed tendon contains both decorin and biglycan small proteoglycans whereas tensional tendon contains primarily decorin. Excess decorin added to cell culture medium did not affect the ability of TGF-beta to enhance synthesis of biglycan.  相似文献   

2.
Evidence for a functional role for extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins in adipose tissue is demonstrated in dynamic changes in expression of ECM genes during adipocyte differentiation and in obesity. Components of the ECM may regulate adipose cell number expansion by restricting pre-adipocyte proliferation, regulating apoptosis and inhibiting adipogenesis. Although pre-adipocytes express multiple proteoglycans, their role in pre-adipocyte proliferation up to now has remained unknown. The study described here was conducted to characterize roles of small leucine-rich proteoglycans (SLRPs) in adipocyte proliferation. Pre-adipocytes were seeded on plates coated with biglycan and decorin and were allowed to differentiate. In addition, pre-adipocytes were incubated on plates coated with biglycan, decorin, or fibronectin and measurements were made of cell proliferation and apoptosis. We are able to report that SLRPs decorin and biglycan did not affect differentiation of our 3T3-L1 cells; however, biglycan and decorin did reduce proliferation of pre-adipocytes, partly by induction of apoptosis. Furthermore, anti-proliferative capabilities of decorin and biglycan were nullified with removal of GAG side-chains suggesting that the chains played key roles in anti-proliferative effects of the SLRPs. We also found that co-treatment of decorin or biglycan with the proteoglycan fibronectin restored normal proliferation, an indication that multiple ECM proteins may act in concert to regulate overall proliferation rates of pre-adipocytes. These studies indicate that SLRPs may compose a regulatory factor in adipose tissue expansion, through hyperplasia.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Various osteoblastic cell lines were examined for the relationship between the presence of cell-surface transforming growth factor (TGF)-β receptors and the synthesis of matrix proteins with their responsiveness to TGF-β. Treatment with TGF-β1 inhibited proliferation and stimulated proteoglycan and fibronectin synthesis in MC3T3-E1 and MG 63 cells. The major proteoglycans synthesized by these cells were decorin and biglycan, and TGF-β1 markedly stimulated the synthesis of decorin in MC3T3-E1 and of biglycan in MG 63 cells. SaOS 2 and UMR 106 cells synthesized barely detectable amounts of decorin or biglycan, and TGF-β1 did not stimulate the synthesis of these proteoglycans. In SaOS 2 cells, however, TGF-β1 enhanced fibronectin synthesis. TGF-β1 did not show any of these effects in UMR 106 cells. Receptor cross-linking studies revealed that only MC3T3-E1 and MG 63 cells had both types I and II signal-transducing receptors for TGF-β in addition to betaglycan. SaOS 2 cells possessed type I but no type II receptor on the cell surface. In contrast, SaOS 2 as well as MC3T3-E1 and MG 63 cells expressed type II receptor mRNA by Northern blot analysis, and cell lysates contained type II receptor by Western blot analysis. Thus, it appears that type II receptor present in SaOS 2 cells is not able to bind TGF-β1 under these conditions. UMR 106 cells with no response to TGF-β1 had neither of the signal-transducing receptors by any of the analyses. These observations using clonal osteoblastic cell lines demonstrate that the ability of osteoblastic cells to synthesize bone matrix proteoglycans is associated with the responsiveness of these cells to TGF-β1, that the responsiveness of osteoblastic cells to TGF-β1 in cell proliferation and proteoglycan synthesis correlates with the presence of both types I and II receptors, and that the effect of TGF-β1 on fibronectin synthesis can develop with little binding of TGF-β1 to type II receptor if type I receptor is present. It is suggested that the combination of cell-surface receptors for TGF-β determines the responsiveness of osteoblastic cells to TGF-β and that changes in cell-surface TGF-β receptors may play a role in the regulation of matrix protein synthesis and bone formation in osteoblasts. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Tendon function involves the development of an organized hierarchy of collagen fibrils. Small leucine-rich proteoglycans have been implicated in the regulation of fibrillogenesis and decorin is the prototypic member of this family. Decorin-deficient mice demonstrate altered fibril structure and mechanical function in mature skin and tail tendons. However, the developmental role(s) of decorin needs to be elucidated. To define these role(s) during tendon development, tendons (flexor digitorum longus) were analyzed ultrastructurally from postnatal day 10 to 90. Decorin-deficient tendons developed abnormal, irregularly contoured fibrils. Finite mixture modeling estimated that the mature tendon was a three-subpopulation mixture of fibrils with characteristic diameter ranges. During development, in each subpopulation the mean diameter was consistently larger in mutant mice. Also, diameter distributions and the percentage of fibrils in each subpopulation were altered. Biomechanical analyses demonstrated that mature decorin-deficient tendons had significantly reduced strength and stiffness; however, there was no reduction in immature tendons. Expression of decorin and biglycan, a closely related family member, was analyzed during development. Decorin increased with development while biglycan decreased. Spatially, both had a comparable localization throughout the tendon. Biglycan expression increased substantially in decorin-deficient tendons suggesting a potential functional compensation. The accumulation of structural defects during fibril growth, a period associated with decorin expression and low biglycan expression, may be the cause of compromised mechanical function in the absence of decorin. Our findings indicate that decorin is a key regulatory molecule and that the temporal switch from biglycan to decorin is an important event in the coordinate regulation of fibrillogenesis and tendon development.  相似文献   

6.
Cell culture in collagen lattice is known to be a more physiological model than monolayer for studying the regulation of extracellular matrix protein deposition. The synthesis of sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAG) and dermatan sulfate (DS) proteoglycans by 3 cell strains were studied in confluent monolayers grown on plastic surface, in comparison to fully retracted collagen lattices. Cells were labelled with35S-sulfate, followed by GAG and proteoglycan analysis by cellulose acetate and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, respectively. The 3 cell strains contracted the lattice in a similar way. In monolayer cultures, the major part of GAG was secreted into culture medium whereas in lattice cultures of dermal fibroblasts and osteosarcoma MG-63 cells but not fibrosarcoma HT-1080 cells, a higher proportion of GAGs, including dermatan sulfate, was retained within the lattices. Small DS proteoglycans, decorin and biglycan, were detected in fibroblasts and MG-63 cultures. They were preferentially trapped within the collagen gel. In retracted lattices, decorin had a higher Mr than in monolayer. Biglycan was detected in monolayer and lattice cultures of MG-63 cells but in lattice cultures only in the case of fibroblasts. In this last case, an up regulation of biglycan mRNA steady state level and down regulation of decorin mRNA was observed, in comparison to monolayers, indicating that collagen can modulate the phenotypical expression of small proteoglycan genes.Supported by a fellowship from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique  相似文献   

7.
Pleiotrophin (PTN) is a secreted heparin-binding, developmentally regulated protein that is found in abundance in fetal, but not mature, cartilage. SDS-page and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) analysis of sulfate-radiolabeled proteoglycans isolated from the medium of mature cultured chondrocytes treated with PTN showed a threefold increase in the levels of proteoglycan synthesis. In contrast, in cultures of fetal chondrocytes, no changes in proteoglycan synthesis were observed. Thymidine incorporation experiments showed a dose-dependent decrease in proliferation of treated cells compared with control cultures, suggesting that pleiotrophin had an inhibitory effect on growth of chondrocytes. Neither FGF or heparin reversed the inhibitory effect of PTN. Capillary electrophoresis of chondroitinase ABC-digested proteoglycans isolated from mature chondrocytes showed 2-4-fold increases in the amounts of the 4S- and 6S-substituted GAG chains for the PTN-treated chondrocytes. Northern analysis showed a twofold upregulation in the mRNA levels of biglycan and collagen type II, but no difference in the message levels for decorin and aggrecan. These results establish that PTN inhibits cell proliferation, while stimulating the synthesis of proteoglycans in mature chondrocytes in vitro, suggesting that PTN may act directly or indirectly to regulate growth and proteoglycan synthesis in the developing matrix of fetal cartilage.  相似文献   

8.
Collagen, the main organic component of bone, is used as a coating on titanium implants and as a scaffold material in bone tissue engineering. Surface modifications of titanium which promote osteoblast adhesion, proliferation and synthesis of collagen by osteoblasts are desirable. One biomimetic approach is the coating of titanium with collagen in fibrillar form. Other organic components of bone may be bound to fibrils and exert additional effects. In this study, the collagen types I-III were compared regarding their ability to bind the proteoglycans decorin and biglycan, which are found in bone. More collagen was bound to collagen II fibrils than to those of types I and III. Therefore, titanium surfaces were coated with fibrils of collagen type II containing biglycan or decorin or neither to investigate the effect of the proteoglycans on human primary osteoblast behaviour. In addition, the growth factor TGF-beta1 was adsorbed onto surfaces coated with fibrils of collagen type II containing biglycan or decorin or neither to investigate the influence of decorin and biglycan on the effect of TGF-beta1 on osteoblasts. Fibril-bound biglycan and decorin influence primary osteoblast behaviour by themselves. The presence of substrate-bound biglycan or decorin influences the effect of TGF-beta1. These results may be important when designing collagen-based coatings or scaffolds for tissue engineering, including those loaded with growth factors.  相似文献   

9.
Extracellular matrix glycoproteins and proteoglycans bind a variety of growth factors and cytokines thereby regulating matrix assembly as well as bone formation. However, little is known about the mechanisms by which extracellular matrix molecules modulate osteogenic stem cells and bone formation. Using mice deficient in two members of the small leucine-rich proteoglycans, biglycan and decorin, we uncovered a role for these two extracellular matrix proteoglycans in modulating bone formation from bone marrow stromal cells. Our studies showed that the absence of the critical transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta)-binding proteoglycans, biglycan and decorin, prevents TGF-beta from proper sequestration within the extracellular matrix. The excess TGF-beta directly binds to its receptors on bone marrow stromal cells and overactivates its signaling transduction pathway. Overall, the predominant effect of the increased TGF-beta signaling in bgn/dcn-deficient bone marrow stromal cells is a "switch in fate" from growth to apoptosis, leading to decreased numbers of osteoprogenitor cells and subsequently reduced bone formation. Thus, biglycan and decorin appear to be essential for maintaining an appropriate number of mature osteoblasts by modulating the proliferation and survival of bone marrow stromal cells. These findings underscore the importance of the micro-environment in controlling the fate of adult stem cells and reveal a novel cellular and molecular basis for the physiological and pathological control of bone mass.  相似文献   

10.
Proteoglycans (PGs) comprise a group of extracellular matrix macromolecules which play an important role in matrix biology. In this study, normal human skin and gingival fibroblast cultures were incubated with transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1), and the expression of three PGs, viz. biglycan (PGI), decorin (PGII), and versican (a large fibroblast proteoglycan) was examined. The results indicate that TGF-beta 1 (5 ng/ml) markedly increased the expression of biglycan (up to 24-fold) and versican (up to 6-fold) mRNAs and the enhancement of biglycan expression was coordinate with elevated type I procollagen gene expression in the same cultures. In contrast, the expression of decorin mRNA was markedly (up to approximately 70%) inhibited by TGF-beta 1. The response to TGF-beta 1 was similar in both skin and gingival fibroblasts, although the gingival cells were clearly more responsive to stimulation by TGF-beta 1 with respect to biglycan gene expression. Analysis of 35S-labeled proteoglycans in the culture media of skin and gingival fibroblasts also revealed stimulation of biglycan and versican production, and reduction in decorin production. Quantitation of both [35S]sulfate and [3H]leucine-labeled decorin in cell culture media by immunoprecipitation revealed a 50% reduction in decorin production in cell cultures treated with TGF-beta 1. This TGF-beta 1-elicited reduction was accompanied by an apparent increase in the size of the decorin molecules, although the size of the core protein was not altered, as judged by Western immunoblotting following chondroitinase ABC digestion. Analysis of the proteoglycans in the matrix and membrane fractions also revealed increased amounts of versican in cultures treated with TGF-beta 1. These results indicate differential regulation of PG gene expression in fibroblasts by TGF-beta 1, and these observations emphasize the role of PGs in the extracellular matrix biology and pathology.  相似文献   

11.
Tendons are collagenous tissues made of mainly Type I collagen and it has been shown that the major proteoglycans of tendons are decorin and versican. Little is still known about the catabolism of these proteoglycans in tendon. Therefore, the aim of the study was to characterise the proteoglycans including their catabolic products present in uncultured bovine tendon and in the explant cultures of tendon. In this study, the proteoglycans were extracted from the tensile region of deep flexor tendon and isolated by ion-exchange chromatography and after deglycosylation analysed by SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis, Western blotting and amino-terminal amino acid sequence analysis. Based on amino acid sequence analysis, approximately 80% of the total proteoglycan core proteins in fresh tendon was decorin. Other species that were detected were biglycan and the large proteoglycans versican (splice variants V(0) and/or V(1)) and aggrecan. Approximately 35% of decorin present in the matrix showed carboxyl-terminal proteolytic processing at a number of specific sites. The analysis of small proteoglycans lost to the medium of tendon explants showed the presence of biglycan and decorin with the intact core protein as well as decorin fragments that contained the amino terminus of the core protein. In addition, two core protein peptides of decorin starting at residues K(171) and D(180) were observed in the matrix and one core protein with an amino-terminal sequence commencing at G(189) was isolated from the culture medium. The majority of the large proteoglycans present in the matrix of tendon were degraded and did not contain the G1 globular domain. Furthermore the aggrecan catabolites present in fresh tendon and lost to the medium of explants were derived from aggrecanase cleavage of the core protein at residues E(373)-A(374), E(1480)-G(1481) and E(1771)-A(1772). The analysis of versican catabolites (splice variants V(0) and/or V(1)) also showed evidence of degradation of the core protein by aggrecanase within the GAG-beta subdomain, as well as cleavage by other proteinase(s) within the GAG-alpha and GAG-beta subdomains of versican (variants V(0) and/or V(2)). Degradation products from the amino terminal region of type XII collagen were also detected in the matrix and medium of tendon explants. This work suggests a prominent role for aggrecanase enzymes in the degradation of aggrecan and to a lesser extent versican. Other unidentified proteinases are also involved in the degradation of versican and small leucine-rich proteoglycans.  相似文献   

12.
Fibrosis is a common pathological feature observed in muscles of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Biglycan and decorin are small chondroitin/dermatan sulfate proteoglycans in the muscle extracellular matrix (ECM) that belong to the family of structurally related proteoglycans called small leucine-rich repeat proteins. Decorin is considered an anti-fibrotic agent, preventing the process by blocking TGF-beta activity. There is no information about their expression in DMD patients. We found an increased amount of both proteoglycans in the ECM of skeletal muscle biopsies obtained from DMD patients. Both biglycan and decorin were augmented in the perimysium of muscle tissue, but only decorin increased in the endomysium as seen by immunohistochemical analyses. Fibroblasts were isolated from explants obtained from muscle of DMD patients and the incorporation of radioactive sulfate showed an increased synthesis of both decorin and biglycan in cultured fibroblasts compared to controls. The size of decorin and biglycan synthesized by DMD and control fibroblasts seems to be similar in size and anion charge. These findings show that decorin and biglycan are increased in DMD skeletal muscle and suggest that fibroblasts would be, at least, one source for these proteoglycans likely playing a role in the muscle response to dystrophic cell damage.  相似文献   

13.
This work investigated the kinetics of catabolism and the catabolic fate of the newly synthesized (35)S-labelled proteoglycans present in explant cultures of tendon. Tissue from the proximal region of bovine deep flexor tendon was incubated with [(35)S]sulfate for 6 h and then placed in explant cultures for periods of up to 15 days. The amount of radiolabel associated with proteoglycans and free [(35)S]sulfate lost to the medium and retained in the matrix was determined for each day in culture. It was shown that the rate of catabolism of radiolabelled small proteoglycans (decorin and biglycan) was significantly slower (T((1/2)) > 20 days) compared with the radiolabelled large proteoglycans (aggrecan and versican) that were rapidly lost from the tissue (T((1/2)) approximately 2 days). Both the small and large newly synthesized proteoglycans were lost from the matrix with either intact or proteolytically modified core proteins. When explant cultures of tendon were maintained either at 4 degrees C or in the presence of the lysosomotrophic agent ammonium chloride, inhibition of the cellular catabolic pathway for small proteoglycans was demonstrated indicating the involvement of cellular activity and lysosomes in the catabolism of small proteoglycans. It was estimated from these studies that approximately 60% of the radiolabelled small proteoglycans that were lost from the tissue were degraded by the intracellular pathway present in tendon cells. This work shows that the pathways of catabolism for large aggregating and small leucine-rich proteoglycans are different in tendon and this may reflect the roles that these two populations of proteoglycans play in the maintenance of the extracellular matrix of tendon.  相似文献   

14.
Decorin and biglycan are closely related abundant extracellular matrix proteoglycans that have been shown to bind to C1q. Given the overall structural similarities between C1q and mannose-binding lectin (MBL), the two key recognition molecules of the classical and the lectin complement pathways, respectively, we have examined functional consequences of the interaction of C1q and MBL with decorin and biglycan. Recombinant forms of human decorin and biglycan bound C1q via both collagen and globular domains and inhibited the classical pathway. Decorin also bound C1 without activating complement. Furthermore, decorin and biglycan bound efficiently to MBL, but only biglycan could inhibit activation of the lectin pathway. Other members of the collectin family, including human surfactant protein D, bovine collectin-43, and conglutinin also showed binding to decorin and biglycan. Decorin and biglycan strongly inhibited C1q binding to human endothelial cells and U937 cells, and biglycan suppressed C1q-induced MCP-1 and IL-8 production by human endothelial cells. In conclusion, decorin and biglycan act as inhibitors of activation of the complement cascade, cellular interactions, and proinflammatory cytokine production mediated by C1q. These two proteoglycans are likely to down-regulate proinflammatory effects mediated by C1q, and possibly also the collectins, at the tissue level.  相似文献   

15.
Evaluations of tendon mechanical behavior based on biochemical and structural arrangement have implications for designing tendon specific treatment modalities or replacement strategies. In addition to the well studied type I collagen, other important constituents of tendon are the small proteoglycans (PGs). PGs have been shown to vary in concentration within differently loaded areas of tendon, implicating them in specific tendon function. This study measured the mechanical properties of multiple tendon tissues from normal mice and from mice with knock-outs of the PGs decorin or biglycan. Tail tendon fascicles, patellar tendons (PT), and flexor digitorum longus tendons (FDL), three tissues representing different in vivo loading environments, were characterized from the three groups of mice. It was hypothesized that the absence of decorin or biglycan would have individual effects on each type of tendon tissue. Surprisingly, no change in mechanical properties was observed for the tail tendon fascicles due to the PG knockouts. The loss of decorin affected the PT causing an increase in modulus and stress relaxation, but had little effect on the FDL. Conversely, the loss of biglycan did not significantly affect the PT, but caused a reduction in both the maximum stress and modulus of the FDL. These results give mechanical support to previous biochemical data that tendons likely are uniquely tailored to their specific location and function. Variances such as those presented here need to be further characterized and taken into account when designing therapies or replacements for any one particular tendon.  相似文献   

16.
Large and small proteoglycans are essential components of articular cartilage. How to induce chondrocytes to repair damaged cartilage with normal ratios of matrix components after their loss due to degenerative joint disease has been a major research focus. We have developed immortalized human chondrocyte cell lines for examining the regulation of cartilage-specific matrix gene expression. However, the decreased synthesis and deposition of cartilage matrix associated with a rapid rate of proliferation has presented difficulties for further examination at the protein level. In these studies, proteoglycan synthesis was characterized in two chondrocyte cell lines, T/C-28a2 and tsT/AC62, derived, respectively, from juvenile costal and adult articular cartilage, under culture conditions that either promoted or decreased cell proliferation. Analysis of proteo[36S]glycans by Sepharose CL-4B chromatography and SDS-PAGE showed that the large proteoglycan aggrecan and the small, leucine-rich proteoglycans, decorin and biglycan, were produced under every culture condition studied. In monolayer cultures, a high initial cell density and conditions that promoted proliferation (presence of serum for T/C-28a2 cells or permissive temperature for the temperature-sensitive tsT/AC62 cells) favored cell survival and ratios of proteoglycans expected for differentiated chondrocytes. However, the tsT/AC62 cells produced more proteoglycans at the nonpermissive temperature. Culture of cells suspended in alginate resulted in a significant decrease in proteoglycan production in all culture conditions. While the tsT/AC62 cells continued to produce a larger amount of aggrecan than small proteoglycans, the T/C-28a2 cells lost the ability to produce significant amounts of aggrecan in alginate culture. In addition, our data indicate that immortalized chondrocytes may alter their ability to retain pericellular matrix under changing culture conditions, although the production of the individual matrix components does not change. These findings provide critical information that will assist in the development of a reproducible chondrocyte culture model for the study of regulation of proteoglycan biosynthesis in cartilage.  相似文献   

17.
Osteoblasts elaborate a dynamic extracellular matrix that is constructed and mineralized as bone is formed. This matrix is primarily composed of collagen, along with noncollagenous proteins which include glycoproteins and proteoglycans. After various times in culture, human bone cells were labeled with [35S]sulfate, [3H] leucine/proline, or [3H]glucosamine and the metabolism of hyaluronan and four distinct species of proteoglycans (PGs) was assayed in the medium, cell layer, and intracellular pools. These cells produce hyaluronan (Mr approximately 1,400,000; a chondroitin sulfate PG (CSPG), Mr approximately 600,000; a heparan sulfate PG (HSPG), Mr approximately 400,000; and two dermatan sulfate PGs with Mr approximately 270,000 (biglycan, PG I) and Mr approximately 135,000 (decorin, PG II) that distribute between the medium and cell layer. Two days following subculture, 12 h [35S]sulfate steady-state labeling yielded a composition of 24, 27, 31, and 18% for total CSPG, HSPG, biglycan, and decorin, respectively. While HSPG and decorin levels and distribution between medium and cell layer remained relatively constant during steady-state labeling at different times in culture, CSPG and biglycan levels increased dramatically at late stages of growth, and their distribution changed throughout culture. These results were independent of cell density, media depletion, and labeling pool effects. In contrast, hyaluronan synthesis was uncoupled from PG synthesis and apparently density-dependent. Pulse chase labeling at different stages of culture showed that the CSPG and decorin behaved as secretory PGs. Both HSPG and biglycan underwent catabolism, with HSPG possessing a t1/2 of 8 h and biglycan a t1/2 of 4 h. While the rate of HSPG turnover did not appreciably change between early and late culture, that of biglycan decreased. The mRNA for decorin was constant, while that of biglycan changed during culture. These results suggest that each PG possesses a distinct pattern of cellular and temporal distribution that may reflect specific stages in matrix formation and maturation.  相似文献   

18.
Previous studies have shown that a synthetic, unglycosylated analogue of the N-terminal peptide from link protein can function as a growth factor and up-regulate proteoglycan biosynthesis in explant cultures of normal human articular cartilage from a wide age range of subjects (McKenna et al., Arthritis Rheum. 41 (1998) 157-162). The present work further shows that link peptide increased proteoglycan synthesis by cartilage cultured in both the presence and absence of serum, suggesting that the mechanism of up-regulation may be different from that of insulin-like growth factors. The proteoglycans synthesised during stimulation with link peptide were of normal hydrodynamic size and the ratio of core protein to glycosaminoglycan side chains and the proportions of the large proteoglycan aggrecan to the small proteoglycans, decorin and biglycan, remained constant. Aggrecan molecules were equally capable of forming aggregates as those from control tissues and the relative proportions of decorin and biglycan were unchanged showing that both were co-ordinately up-regulated. These results confirmed that this novel peptide is a potent stimulator of proteoglycan synthesis by articular cartilage and showed that the newly synthesised proteoglycans were of normal composition.  相似文献   

19.
Decorin and biglycan proteoglycans play important roles in the organization of the extracellular matrix, and in the regulation of cell adhesion and migration. Given morphological and functional endothelial heterogeneity, information is needed regarding whether endothelial cells (ECs) from different vascular beds possess different profiles of proteoglycan constituents of the basement membranes. Here, we report that endothelia from different murine organs and EC lines derived thereof produce and secrete different patterns of proteoglycans. A faint colocalization between decorin and PECAM/CD31 was found on tissue sections from mouse heart, lung and kidney by immunofluorescence. Three EC lines derived from these organs produced decorin (100-kDa) and its core protein (45-kDa). Extracellular decorin recognition in culture supernatant was only possible after chondroitin lyase digestion suggesting that the core protein of secreted proteoglycan is more encrypted by glycosaminoglycans than the intracellular one. Heart and lung ECs were able to produce and release decorin. Kidney ECs synthesized the proteoglycan and its core protein but no secretion was detected in culture supernatants. Although biglycan production was recorded in all EC lines, secretion was almost undetectable, consistent with immunofluorescence results. In addition, no biglycan secretion was detected after EC growth supplement treatment, indicating that biglycan is synthesized, secreted and quickly degraded extracellularly by metalloproteinase-2. Low molecular-mass dermatan sulfate was the predominant glycosaminoglycan identified bound to the core protein. ECs from different vascular beds, with differences in morphology, physiology and cell biology show differences in the proteoglycan profile, extending their heterogeneity to potential differences in cell migration capacities.  相似文献   

20.
The interactions of the dermatan sulfate proteoglycans biglycan and decorin have been investigated with the elastic fiber components, tropoelastin, fibrillin-containing microfibrils, and microfibril-associated glycoproteins (MAGP) 1 and 2. Both proteoglycans were found to bind tropoelastin and fibrillin-containing microfibrils but not MAGPs 1 and 2 in solid phase binding assays. The specificity of the binding of biglycan and decorin to tropoelastin was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation experiments and by the blocking of the interactions with elastin-derived peptides. Isolated core proteins from biglycan and decorin bound to tropoelastin more strongly than the intact proteoglycans, and there were no differences in the tropoelastin binding characteristics of distinct glucuronate-rich and iduronate-rich glycoforms of biglycan. These findings indicated that the binding sites were contained in the protein cores of the proteoglycans rather than the glycosaminoglycan side chains. Scatchard analysis showed that biglycan bound more avidly than decorin to tropoelastin with K(d) values estimated as 1.95 x 10(-7) m and 5.3 x 10(-7) m, respectively. In blocking experiments each proteoglycan showed extensive inhibition of binding of the other to tropoelastin but was most effective at blocking its own binding. This result suggested that biglycan and decorin had closely spaced but distinct binding sites on tropoelastin. Addition of the elastin-binding protein MAGP-1 to the assays enhanced the binding of biglycan to tropoelastin but had no effect on the decorin-tropoelastin interaction. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments showed that MAGP-1 interacted with biglycan but not decorin in the solution phase. The results indicated that biglycan specifically formed a ternary complex with tropoelastin and MAGP-1. Overall the study supports the concept that biglycan may have a specific role in the elastinogenic phase of elastic fiber formation.  相似文献   

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