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1.
Proteoglycans synthesized by cultured mouse osteoblasts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Proteoglycan synthesis in nonmineralizing osteoblast cultures was investigated. Cultures were labeled with [35S]sulfate or [3H]serine, and proteoglycans were extracted from medium and cell layer with 4 M guanidine HCl. Labeled material was subjected to Sepharose CL-4B and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The size and composition of the glycosaminoglycan chains and the protein core size were determined. Two proteoglycan populations were isolated by Sepharose CL-4B chromatography: a minor excluded species with chondroitin sulfate chains of apparent Mr 25,000 and a smaller population (Kav = 0.43) accounting for 80% of the total labeled material. This small population resolved into two species by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Both species contain dermatan sulfate chains of apparent Mr 40,000 and a core protein with Mr 45,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels. With the exception of their glycosaminoglycan composition these species appear similar to those extracted from bone. In addition, high molecular weight hyaluronic acid and glycosaminoglycan peptides were found in cell extracts.  相似文献   

2.
When slices of adult rabbit articular cartilage were incubated in culture medium, the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate or [3H]acetate into glycosaminoglycans increased 4-8 fold during the first 5 days of incubation. Similar changes in biosynthetic activity were observed during culture of adult bovine cartilage. The activation of synthesis was not serum-dependent, but appeared to be a result of the depletion of tissue proteoglycan that occurs under these incubation conditions [Sandy, Brown & Lowther (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 543, 536--544]. Thus, although complete activation was observed in serum-free medium, it was not observed if the cartilage was cultured inside dialysis tubing or in medium containing added proteoglycan subunit. The average molecular size of the proteoglycans synthesized by activated tissue was slightly larger than normal, as determined by chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B, and the average molecular size of the glycosaminoglycans synthesized by activated tissue was markedly increased over the normal. The increase in chain size was accompanied by an increase in the proportion of the chains degraded by chondroitinase ABC; these results are consistent with the preferential synthesis by activated chondrocytes of chondroitin sulphate-rich proteoglycans. The increase in glycosaminoglycan chain size was observed whether the chains were formed on endogenous core protein or on exogenous benzyl-beta-D-zyloside. An approximate 4-fold activation in culture of glycosaminoglycan synthesis on protein core was accompanied by a 1.54-fold increase in the rate of incorporation of [3H]serine into the chondroitin sulphate-linkage region of the proteoglycans. A 2.8-fold activation in culture of glycosaminoglycan synthesis on benzyl-beta-D-zyloside was accompanied by a 1.7-fold increase in the rate of incorporation of [3H]benzyl-beta-D-zyloside into glycosaminoglycans. The activation of glycosaminoglycan synthesis was, however, accompanied by no detectable change in the activity of xylosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.26) in cell-free extracts. These results are discussed in relation to current ideas on the control of proteoglycan synthesis in cartilage.  相似文献   

3.
The proteoglycans synthesized by fibroblasts derived from healthy human gingivae were isolated and characterized. The largest medium proteoglycan was excluded from Sepharose CL-4B but not from Sepharose CL-2B; it was recovered in the most-dense density gradient fraction and identified as a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. The medium contained two smaller proteoglycans; one contained predominantly chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, while the other was comprised predominantly of dermatan sulfate proteoglycan and was quantitatively the major species. The largest proteoglycan in the cell layer fraction, excluded from both Sepharose CL-2B and Sepharose CL-4B, was found in the least-dense density gradient fraction and contained heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. It could be further dissociated by treatment with detergent, suggesting an intimate association with cell membranes. Two other proteoglycan populations of intermediate size were identified in the cell layer extracts which contained variable proportions of heparan sulfate, dermatan sulfate, or chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. Some small molecular weight material indicative of free glycosaminoglycan chains was also associated with the cell layer fraction. Carbohydrate analysis of the proteoglycans demonstrated the glycosaminoglycan chains to have approximate average molecular weights of 25,000. In addition, N- and O-linked oligosaccharides which were associated with the proteoglycans appeared to be sulfated in varying degrees.  相似文献   

4.
A microsomal preparation from chondroitin 4-sulfate-synthesizing cultured mouse mastocytoma cells was incubated with UDP-[3H]GalNAc, UDP-GlcA, and 3'-phosphoadenylylphosphosulfate (PAPS) for 30 s at 10 degrees C and with UDP-[14C]GlcA, UDP-GalNAc, and PAPS for 4 h at 37 degrees C for synthesis of 3H- and 14C-labeled chondroitin/chondroitin sulfate. The latter incubation provided more than 100 times as much product as did the short incubation at 10 degrees C. Upon chromatography of the isolated labeled glycosaminoglycans on a Sepharose CL-6B column, most of the [14C]glycosaminoglycan from the 4 h, 37 degrees C incubation was excluded from the column, indicating that this nascent glycosaminoglycan had been polymerized fully. In contrast, most of the [3H]glycosaminoglycan from the 30 s, 10 degrees C incubation was mostly retarded upon cochromatography on this same column, indicating that the nascent glycosaminoglycan was still growing in size. The labeled fractions representing chondroitin/chondroitin sulfate of varying sizes were analyzed for degree of sulfation by degradation with chondroitin ABC lyase followed by paper electrophoresis of the products. Results indicated that the [14C]chondroitin/chondroitin sulfate formed in the 4-h incubation was 60-70% sulfated. Incomplete chains of [3H]chondroitin/chondroitin sulfate formed in the 30-s incubation were also sulfated as much as 20-25%. As the size of the [3H]chondroitin/chondroitin sulfate increased, there was a concomitant increase in sulfation. These results demonstrate that in this microsomal system sulfation takes place while the nascent chondroitin glycosaminoglycan chains are still actively growing in length, although the sulfation lags somewhat behind the polymerization. This not only indicates a common membrane location for both polymerization and sulfation of chondroitin but also demonstrates that the sulfation of chondroitin by these mastocytoma cells may occur during the process of glycosaminoglycan polymerization rather than subsequent to completion of the glycosaminoglycan chains.  相似文献   

5.
We have previously reported that liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) are responsible for the clearance of monocyte chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan serglycin from the circulation (øynebråten et al.(2000) J. Leukocyte Biol. 67; 183–188). The aim of the present study was to investigate the kinetics of degradation of endocytosed serglycin in primary cultures of LSECs. The final degradation products of serglycin labelled biosynthetically in the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains with [3H] in the acetyl groups of N-acetyl galactosamine residues, [14C] in the pyranose rings, or [35S] in the sulfate groups were identified as[3H]-acetate, [14C]-lactate and [35S]-sulfate. Comparison of the rate of release of degradation products from the cells after endocytosis of serglycin labelled chemically with 125I in the tyrosine residues, or biosynthetically with [35S] or [3H] in the sulfate or acetyl groups, respectively, showed that 125I appeared more rapidly in the medium than [35S]-sulfate and [3H]-acetate. Judging from the speed of appearance of free 125I both intracellularly and in the medium, the core protein is degraded considerably more rapidly than the GAG chains.Desulfation of the GAG chains starts after the GAG chains are released from the core protein. Generation of lactate and acetate as the final products from degradation of the carbon skeleton of the GAG chains indicates that catabolism of endocytosed macromolecules in LSECs proceeds anaerobically.  相似文献   

6.
A differentiated population of cells with metachromatically staining granules and surface IgE receptors was obtained from mouse bone marrow cultured for 2 weeks in the presence of conditioned medium derived from concanavalin A-stimulated splenocytes. The cells were found to incorporate large amounts of [35S]sulfate into an intracellular 35S-labeled proteoglycan of Mr approximately 200,000 containing a maximum of seven glycosaminoglycan side chains (Mr = 25,000). After chondroitinase ABC treatment of density gradient-purified [3H] serine-labeled proteoglycan, the resulting core was Mr approximately 26,000 as assessed by gel filtration. Two-dimensional cellulose acetate electrophoresis of beta-eliminated 35S-labeled glycosaminoglycan revealed a single type of glycosaminoglycan that migrated at the position of oversulfated chondroitin sulfate E from squid cartilage. Chondroitinase ABC degradation of the 35S-labeled glycosaminoglycan yielded two cleavage products in approximately equal molar amounts which co-migrated in both descending paper chromatography and high voltage paper electrophoresis with a monosulfated disaccharide, 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-3-O-(beta-D-gluco-4-enepyranosyluronic acid)-4-O-sulfo-D-galactose, and a disulfated disaccharide, 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-3-O-(beta-D-gluco-4-enepyranosyluronic acid)-4-6-di-O-sulfo-D-galactose. The release of some free [35S]sulfate from the oversulfated disaccharide with either chondro-4-sulfatase or chondro-6-sulfatase and the complete desulfation by their combined action established that the oversulfated disaccharide contained N-acetylgalactosamine-4,6-disulfate. The 35S]labeled proteoglycan of these unique IgE receptor-bearing and histamine-containing cells, therefore, is composed of chondroitin sulfate E rather than heparin glycosaminoglycan, and thus is the first identification of such an intracellular localized proteoglycan in a mammalian cell.  相似文献   

7.
Newly synthesized proteoglycans of rat incisors were labelled in vivo for 6h with [35S]-sulphate in order to facilitate their detection during purification and characterization. Proteoglycans were extracted from non-mineralized portions (predentine) of rat incisors with 4M-guanidinium chloride and subsequently from dentine by demineralization with a 0.4M-EDTA solution containing 4M-guanidinium chloride. Both extractions were performed at 4 degrees C in the presence of proteinase inhibitors. Purification of proteoglycans was achieved with a procedure involving gel-filtration chromatography, selective precipitation of phosphoproteins, affinity chromatography and ion-exchange chromatography. Two proteoglycan populations were found in the initial extract (Pd-PG I and Pd-PG II), whereas only one fraction (D-PG) was obtained after demineralization. The minor proteoglycan fraction from the first extract, Pd-PG I, although not totally characterized, differed sharply from the other proteoglycans in that it had a larger molecular size with larger glycosaminoglycan chains composed of chondroitin 4- and 6-sulphate isomers. In contrast, the major proteoglycans Pd-PG II and D-PG had smaller hydrodynamic sizes with smaller glycosaminoglycan chains (but larger than those from bovine nasal cartilage proteoglycans) composed exclusively of chondroitin 4-sulphate. The major proteoglycans were incapable of interacting with hyaluronic acid. In general, the amino acid compositions of the major proteoglycans of rat incisors resembled that of bovine nasal cartilage proteoglycans, but the former had lower proline, valine, isoleucine, leucine, and higher aspartic acid, contents.  相似文献   

8.
Human neuroblastoma cells (Platt) were detached from tissue culture substrata with a Ca2+ chelating agent, and then the suspended cells were extracted with a sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-containing buffer to maximally solubilize their sulfate-radiolabeled proteoglycans. The majority of the high-molecular-weight material in these dissociative extracts was heparan sulfate proteoglycan, which resolves into two heterodisperse size classes upon gel filtration on columns of Sepharose CL4B. After removal of SDS from these extracts by hydrophobic chromatography on Sep-Pak C18 cartridges, extracts were further fractionated on various affinity matrices. All of the sulfate-radiolabeled material eluted as one peak from DEAE-Sephadex ion-exchange columns. In contrast, affinity fractionation on Sepharose columns derivatized with the heparan sulfate-binding protein, platelet factor-4, resolved three major and one minor subsets of these components. The nonbinding fraction contained some heparan sulfate proteoglycan and some chondroitin sulfate. The weak-binding fraction contained principally heparan sulfate proteoglycan, as well as a small amount of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan; the gel-filtration properties of these proteoglycans before or after alkaline borohydride treatment indicated that they were small in size, containing perhaps 2 to 4 glycosaminoglycan chains. The high-affinity fraction eluted from platelet factor 4-Sepharose was composed entirely of “singlechain” heparan sulfate. A portion of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan of the original extract bound to the hydrophobic affinity matrix, octyl-Sepharose, and this hydrophobic proteoglycan partitioned into the nonbinding and weak-binding fractions of the platelet factor 4-Sepharose affinity columns. These studies reveal that the majority of the proteoglycan made by these neuronal cells in culture is of the heparan sulfate class, is small in size when compared to other characterized proteoglycans, and can be resolved into several overlapping subsets when fractionated on affinity matrices.  相似文献   

9.
Neoplastic mast cells of mice (including long-established and newly derived lines) were grown in large-volume suspension cultures to provide enough cells for preparation of microsomal fractions. Microsomal preparations from P815Y and P815S cells synthesized 14C-labelled glycosaminoglycan when incubated with UDP-[14C]glucuronic acid and UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine. No significant amount of 14C-labelled glycosaminoglycan was formed when UDP-N-acetylglucosamine was substituted for the UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine. Microsomal preparations from X163 cells synthesized 14C-labelled glycosaminoglycan when incubated with UDP-[14C]glucuronic acid and either UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine or UDP-N-acetylglucosamine. The 14C-labelled glycosaminoglycan formed in the presence of UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine was degradable by testicular hyaluronidase, indicating that it was chondroitin-like. The 14C-labelled glycosaminoglycan formed in the presence of UDP-N-acetylglucosamine was not degradable by testicular hyaluronidase. Microsomal preparations from P815S cells were tested for sulphating activity by incubation with adenosine 3′-phosphate 5′-sulphatophosphate, as well as UDP-[14C]glucuronic acid, and UDP-N-acetylgalactosamine. The resulting newly synthesized polysaccharide was shown by chondroitinase ABC digestion to be 70% chondroitin 4-sulphate and 30% chondroitin. The molecular size of this newly synthesized glycosaminoglycan was determined by gel filtration to be larger than 40000 mol.wt. In general, the glycosaminoglycan-synthesizing ability of the microsomal preparations appeared to reflect glycosaminoglycan synthesis by the intact cells.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of cycloheximide on chondroitin sulphate biosynthesis was studied in bovine articular cartilage maintained in culture. Addition of 0.4 mM-cycloheximide to the culture medium was followed, over the next 4h, by a first-order decrease in the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate into glycosaminoglycan (half-life, t 1/2 = 32 min), which is consistent with the depletion of a pool of proteoglycan core protein. Addition of 1.0 mM-benzyl beta-D-xyloside increased the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate and [3H]acetate into glycosaminoglycan, but this elevated rate was also diminished by cycloheximide. It was concluded that cycloheximide exerted two effects on the tissue; not only did it inhibit the synthesis of the core protein, but it also lowered the tissue's capacity for chondroitin sulphate chain synthesis. Similar results were obtained with chick chondrocytes grown in high-density cultures. Although the exact mechanism of this secondary effect of cycloheximide is not known, it was shown that there was no detectable change in cellular ATP concentration or in the amount of three glycosyltransferases (galactosyltransferase-I, N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase and glucuronosyltransferase-II) involved in chondroitin sulphate chain synthesis. The sizes of the glycosaminoglycan chains formed in the presence of cycloheximide were larger than those formed in control cultures, whereas those synthesized in the presence of benzyl beta-D-xyloside were consistently smaller, irrespective of the presence of cycloheximide. These results suggest that beta-D-xylosides must be used with caution to study chondroitin sulphate biosynthesis as an event entirely independent of proteoglycan core-protein synthesis, and they also indicate a possible involvement of the core protein in the activation of the enzymes of chondroitin sulphate synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
We studied the effect of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) on the synthesis and secretion of proteoglycans by cultured human umbilical-vein endothelial cells. Confluent cultures were incubated with [35S]sulphate or [3H]glucosamine in lipoprotein-deficient serum in the presence and in the absence (control) of LDL (100-400 micrograms/ml), and metabolically labelled proteoglycans in culture medium and cell layer were analysed. LDL increased accumulation of labelled proteoglycans in medium and cell fractions up to a concentration of 200 micrograms/ml. At this concentration of LDL the accumulations of proteoglycans in medium and cell layer were 65% and 32% respectively above control for 35S-labelled proteoglycans, and 55% and 28% respectively above control for 3H-labelled proteoglycans. At concentrations above this LDL was found to depress the accumulation of proteoglycans in medium and cell layer. Gel filtration on Sepharose CL-4B showed that in both control and LDL-treated cultures the cell layer contained a large (Kav. = 0) and a small (Kav. = 0.35) heparan sulphate proteoglycan, whereas the culture medium contained a large heparan sulphate proteoglycan (Kav. = 0) and a smaller isomeric chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan (control, Kav. = 0.35; LDL-treated, Kav. = 0.17). The relative increase in hydrodynamic size of the isomeric chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan (Mr 150,000 compared with 90,000) in the medium of cultures exposed to LDL was partly attributable to the larger size of the glycosaminoglycan side chains (Mr 39,000 compared with 21,000). The isomeric chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan in LDL-treated culture was relatively enriched in chondroitin 6-sulphate compared with that in control cultures (39% compared with 29%). Pulse-chase studies showed that LDL treatment did not alter the turnover rate of proteoglycans as compared with controls, implying that the elevation in proteoglycan accumulation in LDL-treated cultures was due to enhanced synthesis. These results demonstrate that LDL can modulate proteoglycan synthesis by cultured vascular endothelial cells, resulting in the secretion of a larger isomeric chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan enriched in chondroitin 6-sulphate.  相似文献   

12.
Addition of actinomycin D (or cordycepin, an alternative inhibitor of RNA synthesis) to cartilage cultures resulted in a first-order decrease in the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate into proteoglycan (half-life = 7.5 +/- 1.1 h). Addition of 1.0 mM-benzyl beta-D-xyloside relieved the initial inhibition of glycosaminoglycan synthesis induced by actinomycin D; however, after a lag of about 10 h the rate of xyloside-initiated glycosaminoglycan synthesis also decreased with apparent first-order kinetics (half-life = 7.1 +/- 1.8 h), which paralleled the decrease in the rate of core-protein-initiated glycosaminoglycan synthesis. The hydrodynamic size of the proteoglycans formed in the presence of actinomycin D remained essentially constant (Kav. 0.21-0.23), whereas the constituent glycosaminoglycan chains were larger than those formed by control cultures, which suggested that the core protein was substituted with fewer but larger glycosaminoglycan chains. Proteoglycans formed in the presence of beta-D-xyloside were significantly smaller (Kav. approximately 0.33) than those synthesized by control cultures, and were further diminished in size after exposure of cultures to actinomycin D. Glycosaminoglycan chains synthesized by these same cultures on to both core-protein and xyloside acceptors were also smaller than those of control cultures. The decrease in synthesis observed after exposure to actinomycin D was not reflected by any significant decrease in the activities of several glycosyltransferases involved in chondroitin sulphate synthesis (galactosyltransferase-I, galactosyltransferase-II, N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase and glucuronosyltransferase-II).  相似文献   

13.
Fractionation of proteoglycans from bovine corneal stroma.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Proteoglycans were extracted from bovine corneal stroma with 4M-guanidinum chloride, purified by DEAE-dellulose chromatography (Antonopoulos et al., 1974) and fractionated by precipitation with ethanol into three fractions of approximately equal weight. One of these fractions consisted of a proteoglycan that contained keratan sulphate as the only glycosaminoglycan. In the othertwo fractions proteoglycans that contained chondroitin sulphate, dermatan sulphate and keratan sulphate were present. Proteoglycans which had a more than tenfold excess of galactosaminoglycans over keratan sulphate could be obtianed by further subfractionation. The gel-chromatographic patterns of the glucosaminoglycans before and after digestion with chondroitinase AC differed for the fractions. The individual chondroitin sulphate chains seemed to be larger in cornea than in cartilage. Oligosaccharides, possibly covalently linked to the protein core of the proteoglycans, could be isolated from all fractions. The corneal proteoglycans were shown to have higher protein contents and to be of smaller molecular size than cartilage proteoglycans.  相似文献   

14.
The proteoglycans secreted by a malignant human breast cell line (MDA-MB-231) were compared with the corresponding proteoglycans from a normal human breast cell line (HBL-100). The physicochemical characteristics of these proteoglycans were established by hexosamine analysis, chemical and enzymatic degradations, and dissociative cesium chloride density gradient centrifugation, and by gel filtration before and after alkaline beta-elimination. Both cell lines secreted approximately 70% of the synthesized proteoglycans, which were composed of 20% heparan sulfate and 80% chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans. The MDA cell line secreted large hydrodynamic size (major) and small hydrodynamic size heparan sulfate proteoglycan. In contrast HBL cells secreted only one species having a hydrodynamic size intermediate to the above two. The chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans from MDA medium were slightly larger than the corresponding polymers from HBL medium. All proteoglycans except the small hydrodynamic size heparan sulfate proteoglycan from MDA medium were of high buoyant density. The proteoglycans of both cell lines contained significant proportions of disulfide-linked lower molecular weight components which were more pronounced in the proteoheparan sulfate polymers, particularly those from MDA medium, than in chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans. The glycosaminoglycans of heparan sulfate proteoglycans from MDA medium were more heterogeneous than those from HBL medium. The glycosaminoglycan chains of large hydrodynamic size heparan sulfate proteoglycans from MDA medium were larger in size than those from HBL medium while small hydrodynamic size heparan sulfate proteoglycans contained shorter glycosaminoglycan chains. In contrast to the glycosaminoglycans derived from chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans of both MDA and HBL medium were comparable in size. The heparan sulfate as well as chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans of both cell lines contained both neutral (di- and tetrasaccharides) and sialylated (tri- to hexasaccharides) O-linked oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

15.
The characteristics of cell-associated proteoglycans were studied and compared with those from the medium in suspension cultures of calf articular-cartilage chondrocytes. By including hyaluronic acid or proteoglycan in the medium during [35S]sulphate labelling the proportion of cell-surface-associated proteoglycans could be decreased from 34% to about 15% of all incorporated label. A pulse-chase experiment indicated that this decrease was probably due to blocking of the reassociation with the cells of proteoglycans exported to the medium. Three peaks of [35S]sulphate-labelled proteoglycans from cell extracts and two from the medium were isolated by gel chromatography on Sephacryl S-500. These were characterized by agarose/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of core proteins, by glycosaminoglycan composition and chain size as well as by distribution of glycosaminoglycans in proteolytic fragments. The results showed that associated with the cells were (a) large proteoglycans, typical for cartilage, apparently bound to hyaluronic acid at the cell surface, (b) an intermediate-size proteoglycan with chondroitin sulphate side chains (this proteoglycan, which had a large core protein, was only found associated with the cells and is apparently not related to the large proteoglycans), (c) a small proteoglycan with dermatan sulphate side chains with a low degree of epimerization, and (d) a somewhat smaller proteoglycan containing heparan sulphate side chains. The medium contained a large aggregating proteoglycan of similar nature to the large cell-associated proteoglycan and small proteoglycans with dermatan sulphate side chains with a higher degree of epimerization than those of the cells, i.e. containing some 20% iduronic acid.  相似文献   

16.
Microsomal preparations from Englebreth-Holm-Swarm mouse sarcoma were incubated with UDP-N-acetyl[3H] glucosamine and UDP-[14C]glucuronic acid to form proteoglycan containing [3H,14C]glycosaminoglycan with equimolar amounts of [3H]glucosamine and [14C]glucuronic acid. The labelled glycosaminoglycan was totally resistant to degradation by testicular hyaluronidase, but could be degraded readily by a crudeFlavobacter heparinum enzyme preparation which is capable of degrading heparin and heparan sulfate. Chromatography of the [3H,14C]glycosaminoglycan on DEAE-cellulose provided a pattern with three peaks: the first appearing before hyaluronic acid, the second and largest appearing at the site of hyaluronic acid, and a third appearing slightly beyond hyaluronic acid but before a standard of chondroitin sulfate. When 3-phosphoadenosine 5-phosphosulfate was also included in the reaction mixture, a change appeared in the [3H,14C]glycosaminoglycan so that chromatography on DEAE-cellulose presented a pattern with a significant amount of material which cochromatographed in the area where heparan sulfate would be found. There was no material that co-chromatographed with the more highly sulfated substance, heparin. This indicates that the microsomal preparation from the Englebreth-Holm-Swarm sarcoma is capable of producing a heparan sulfate-like molecule and is controlled in its sulfation of precursors so that heparin is not formed.  相似文献   

17.
Biosynthesis of cartilage proteoglycan was examined in a model system of cultured chondrocytes from a transplantable rat chondrosarcoma. Extensive modification with the addition of chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycan, N-linkcd oligosac-charide, and O-linked oliogosaccharide is required to convert a newly synthesized core protein precursor into a proteoglycan. Kinetic analyses revealed the presence of a large pool of core protein precursor (t1/2 ~ 90 min) awaiting completion into proteoglycan. The large t1/2 of this pool allowed kinetic labeling experiments with a variety of radioactive precursors to distinguish between early biosynthetic events associated primarily with the rough endoplasmic reticulum from late events associated primarily with the Golgi apparatus. The results of a series of experiments indicated that the addition of N-linked oligosaccharide chains occurs early in the biosynthetic process in association with the rough endoplasmic reticulum, whereas the initiation and completion of O-linked oligosaccharides occurs much later, at about the same time as chondroitin sulfate synthesis. This also indicated that keratan sulfate chains, when present in the completed molecule, are added in the Golgi apparatus, as they are probably built on oligosaccharide primers closely related to the O-oligosaccharide chains. Furthermore, when 3H-glucose was used as the precursor, the entry of label into xylose, the linkage sugar between the core protein and the chondroitin sulfate chain, was found to occur within 5 min of the entry of label into galactose and galactosamine in the remainder of the chondroitin sulfate chain. This indicated that the initiation and completion of the chondroitin sulfate chain occurs late in the pathway probably entirely in the Golgi apparatus. Thus, proteoglycan synthesis can be described as occurring in two stages in this system, translation and N-glycosylation of a core protein precursor which has a long half-life in the rough endoplasmic reticulum, followed by extensive rapid modification in the Golgi complex in which the majority of glycosaminoglycan and oligosaccharide chains are added to the core protein precursor with subsequent rapid secretion into the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

18.
A proteoglycan isolated from a rat yolk sac tumor and characterized as a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan with a smaller amount of dermatan sulfate was studied with respect to complex formation with collagen and fibronectin. The proteoglycan co-precipitated with native collagen from neutral salt solutions at 6 degrees C and 37 degrees C. Addition of fibronectin in such precipitation mixtures resulted in incorporation of fibronectin to the precipitate. Treatment of the proteoglycan with alkali to separate the glycosaminoglycan chains from the protein part and digestion of the protein part with papain greatly reduced the capacity of the proteoglycan to precipitate collagen and fibronectin. A defined extracellular matrix as represented by the complexes of collagen, proteoglycan, and fibronectin constructed here may be useful for studies on the biological effects of extracellular matrices. The multiple interactions of matrix macromolecules exemplified by these results may play a role in the formation of extracellular matrices and in the maintenance of their integrity.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Human basophils were obtained from three donors with myelogenous leukemia. Proteoglycans were labeled by using [35S]sulfate as precursor and were extracted in 1 M NaCl with protease inhibitors to preserve their native structure. [35S]proteoglycans filtered on Sepharose 4B with an average m.w. similar to that of a rat heparin proteoglycan that has an estimated m.w. of 750,000. The [35S]glycosaminoglycan side chains filtered with an average m.w. slightly smaller than a 60,000-m.w. glycosaminoglycan marker. The [35S]glycosaminoglycans were resistant to heparinase and susceptible to degradation by chondroitin AC lyase and chondroitin ABC lyase. The intact [35S]glycosaminoglycans chromatographed on DEAE Sepharose as a single peak eluting just before an internal heparin marker. These findings indicate that the [35S]glycosaminoglycans were made up only of chondroitin sulfates. No heparin was identified. The chondroitin sulfate disaccharides that resulted from the action of chondroitin ABC lyase on the basophil glycosaminoglycans consisted of 92% delta Di-4S, 6% delta Di-6S, and 2% disulfated disaccharides. The [35S]chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans were susceptible to cleavage with proteases and could be shown to be released intact from basophils during degranulation initiated by the calcium ionophore A23187. The basophil proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans were capable of binding histamine in water, but not in phosphate-buffered saline, and had no anticoagulant activity.  相似文献   

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