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1.
Artificial extracellular matrices composed of collagen, glycosaminoglycans (GAG), proteoglycans (PG), plasma fibronectin (FN), and a hyaluronate-binding protein (HABP) have been prepared that morphologically resemble embryonic extracellular matrices in vivo at the light and electron microscope level. The effect of each of the above matrix molecules on the structure and "self-assembly" of these artificial matrices was delineated. (1) Matrix components assembled in vitro morphologically resemble their counterparts in vivo, for the most part. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy indicate that under our assembly and fixation conditions, collagen forms striated fibrils that are 125 nm in diameter, FN forms 30- to 60-nm granules, chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (CSPG) forms 27- to 37-nm granules, chondroitin sulfate (CS) assembles into 100- to 250-nm spheres, and hyaluronate (HA) appears either as granular mats when fixed with cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) or as 1.5- to 3-nm microfibrils when preserved with ruthenium red plus tannic acid. These molecules are known to assume the same configurations in embryonic matrices when the same preservation techniques are used with the exception of FN, which generally forms fibrillar arrays. (2) Addition of various matrix molecules can radically change the appearance of the collage gels. HA greatly expands the volume of the gel and increases the space between collagen fibrils. CSPG at low concentrations (less than 1 mg/ml) and CS at high concentrations (greater than 20 mg/ml) bundle the collagen fibrils into twisted ropes. (3) A variety of assays were used to examine binding between various matrix components and retention of these components in the hydrated collagen lattices. These assays included solid-phase binding assays, negative staining of spread mixtures of matrix components, cryostat sections of unfixed mixtures of matrix components, and retention of radiolabeled matrix molecules in fixed and washed gels. A number of these binding interactions may play a role in the assembly and stabilization of the matrix. (a) HA, CSPG, and FN bind to collagen. CS appears to only weakly bind to collagen, if at all. (b) FN promotes the increased retention of HA, CSPG, and to a very small degrees, CS, in collagen gels. Conversely, the GAG increase the retention of 3H-FN in the gels. Furthermore, FN binds to HA, CS, and CSPG as demonstrated by solid surface binding assays and morphological criteria. The increased retention of GAG and CSPG by the addition of FN may be due to both stabilization of binding to the collagen and trapping of matrix complexes within the gel. (c) HA binds to both CS and CSPG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The effects of hyaluronic acid (HA) on the proliferation and chondroitin sulfate (CS) synthesis of chondrocytes embedded in collagen gels were examined. Articular cartilage was isolated from the humerus, femur, and tibia of 21 10-week-old Japanese white rabbits. Chondrocytes isolated by collagenase digestion were embedded in type I collagen gels and cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) with various doses of HA for 4 weeks. Histological and biochemical evaluations were performed at postculture weeks 1, 2, 3, and 4. For biochemical evaluations, isomers such as chondroitin 6-sulfate (delta(di)-6S) and chondroitin 4-sulfate (delta(di)-4S) synthesized by cultured chondrocytes were determined by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) combined with fluorometry. Morphological and histological studies demonstrated that HA-treated chondrocytes in collagen gel proliferated profusely while maintaining their phenotype. At postculture week 4, 0.1 mg/ml of HA induced an eightfold increase in cell counts compared with HA pretreatment values, or 1.5-fold more than control group. Synthesis of delta(di)-6S (delta(di)-6S content/cell) in groups treated with 0.01 and 0.1 mg/ml of HA significantly increased, while gel accumulation rates in groups treated with 0.1 and 1.0 mg/ml of HA scored significantly higher values than other groups. In collagen gel culture, HA enhanced the proliferation and delta(di)-6S synthesis of chondrocytes while maintaining their phenotype. In clinical application, since the supply of autologous chondrocytes for transplantation is not unlimited, the HA-treated culture method may be useful for increasing the number of chondrocytes and thus improving the quality of implants.  相似文献   

3.
D K Whittaker 《Cryobiology》1974,11(3):202-217
Tissues frozen by means of a cryosurgical probe have been examined by electron microscopy following techniques designed to preserve the ice crystal spaces.Ice crystals appeared similar whether tissues were quenched or not following cryosurgery and the various techniques of dehydration resulted in similar ice crystal architecture.Ice crystal spaces in the area deep to the freezing probe were intracellular both in epithelium and muscle although in the muscle zone some fibers contained large and others small crystal spaces. It is suggested that this might be due to variations in the local blood supply.At the periphery of the frozen area ice crystals were usually extracellular producing gross distortion of the cells which, however, retained intracellular structural integrity. These results are consistent with the belief of many workers that intracellular ice is lethal while extracellular ice is not, but no evidence of penetration of cell membrane by ice crystals was seen.  相似文献   

4.
Taking advantage of their optical transparency, we clearly observed the third stage infective juveniles (IJs) of Steinernema feltiae freezing under a cryo-stage microscope. The IJs froze when the water surrounding them froze at −2°C and below. However, they avoid inoculative freezing at −1°C, suggesting cryoprotective dehydration. Freezing was evident as a sudden darkening and cessation of IJs'' movement. Freeze substitution and transmission electron microscopy confirmed that the IJs of S. feltiae freeze intracellularly. Ice crystals were found in every compartment of the body. IJs frozen at high sub-zero temperatures (−1 and −3°C) survived and had small ice crystals. Those frozen at −10°C had large ice crystals and did not survive. However, the pattern of ice formation was not well-controlled and individual nematodes frozen at −3°C had both small and large ice crystals. IJs frozen by plunging directly into liquid nitrogen had small ice crystals, but did not survive. This study thus presents the evidence that S. feltiae is only the second freeze tolerant animal, after the Antarctic nematode Panagrolaimus davidi, shown to withstand extensive intracellular freezing.  相似文献   

5.
Pieces excised from leaf bases and laminae of seedlings of Triticum aestivum L. cv. Lennox were slowly frozen, using a specially designed apparatus, to temperatures between 2° and 14° C. These treatments ranged from non-damaging to damaging, based on ion-leakage tests to be found in the accompanying report (Pearce and Willison 1985, Planta 163, 304–316). The frozen tissue pieces were then freeze-fixed by rapidly cooling them, via melting Freon, to liquid-nitrogen temperature. The tissue was subsequently prepared for electron microscopy by freeze-etching. Ice crystals formed during slow freezing would tend to be much larger than those formed during subsequent freeze-fixation. Ice crystals surrounding the excised tissues were much larger in the frozen than in the control tissues (the latter rapidly freeze-fixed from room temperature). Large ice crystals were present between cells of frozen laminae and absent from controls. Intercellular spaces were infrequent in control leaf bases and no ice-filled intercellular spaces were found in frozen leaf bases. Intracellular ice crystals were smaller in frozen tissues than in controls. It is concluded that all ice formation before freeze-fixation was extracellular. This extracellular ice was either only extra-tissue (leaf bases), or extra-tissue and intercellular (laminae). Periplasmic ice was sometimes present, in control as well as slowly frozen tissues, and the crystals were always small; thus they were probably formed during freeze-fixation rather than during slow freezing. The plasma membrane sometimes showed imprints of cell-wall microfibrils. These were less abundant in leaf bases at 8° C than in controls, and were present on only a minority of plasma membranes from laminae. Therefore, extracellular ice probably did not compress the cells substantially, and changes in cell size and shape were possibly primarily a result of freezing-induced dehydration. Fine-scale distortions (wrinkles) in the plasma membrane, while absent from controls, were present, although only rarely, in both damaged and non-damaged tissues; they were therefore ice-induced but not directly related to the process of damage.  相似文献   

6.
Ice Morphology: Fundamentals and Technological Applications in Foods   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Freezing is the process of ice crystallization from supercooled water. Ice crystal morphology plays an important role in the textural and physical properties of frozen and frozen-thawed foods and in processes such as freeze drying, freeze concentration, and freeze texturization. Size and location of ice crystals are key in the quality of thawed tissue products. In ice cream, smaller ice crystals are preferred because large crystals results in an icy texture. In freeze drying, ice morphology influences the rate of sublimation and several morphological characteristics of the freeze-dried matrix as well as the biological activity of components (e.g., in pharmaceuticals). In freeze concentration, ice morphology influences the efficiency of separation of ice crystals from the concentrated solution. The cooling rate has been the most common variable controlling ice morphology in frozen and partly frozen systems. However, several new approaches show promise in controlling nucleation (consequently, ice morphology), among them are the use of ice nucleation agents, antifreeze proteins, ultrasound, and high pressure. This paper summarizes the fundamentals of freezing, methods of observation and measurement of ice morphology, and the role of ice morphology in technological applications.  相似文献   

7.
A method using magnesium oxide crystals to label the surface of physical gels, such as gelatin gel before quick-freezing is described and discussed. The quick-freeze, deep-etch, rotary replication technique is most adapted to 3-D visualization of physical gel structure. However, it is known that the depth which ultrarapid freezing may reach is limited by the growth of ice crystals as the distance from the surface of the specimen (rapidly cooled by smashing against a cooled metal plate) increases. Consequently, intact preservation of structures occurs only in superficial zones of the specimen. The MgO surface labelling technique provides a simple means for surface recognition. It enables the estimation of a given replicated area depth, taking into account the angle of specimen scraping before etching and replicating. By comparison of views of the same replica at different depths, freezing artifacts may be recognized even when they cause only slight deformations in the structure. This is particularly necessary for interpretation of gel network geometry: interpretation can be made with certainty only if a reliable surface reference marker exists. For gelatin gels, the depth of best freezing can be estimated to be around 5 μm from the frozen sample surface.  相似文献   

8.
Neural crest cells migrate extensively through a complex extracellular matrix (ECM) to sites of terminal differentiation. To determine what role the various components of the ECM may play in crest morphogenesis, quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica) neural crest cells have been cultured in three-dimensional hydrated collagen lattices containing various combinations of macromolecules known to be present in the crest migratory pathways. Neural crest cells migrate readily in native collagen gels whereas the cells are unable to use denatured collagen as a migratory substratum. The speed of movement decreases linearly as the concentration of collagen in the gel increases. Speed of movement of crest cells is stimulated in gels containing 10% fetal calf serum and chick embryo extract, 33 micrograms/ml fibronectin cell-binding fragments, 3 mg/ml chondroitin sulfate, or 3 mg/ml chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan when compared to rates of movement through collagen lattices alone. Low concentrations of hyaluronate (250-500 micrograms/ml) in a 750 micrograms/ml collagen gel do not alter rates of movement over collagen alone, but higher concentrations (4 mg/ml) greatly inhibit migration. Conversely, hyaluronate (250 micrograms/ml) significantly increases speed of movement if the crest cells are cultured in high concentration collagen gels (2.5 mg/ml), suggesting that hyaluronate is expanding spaces and consequently enhancing migration. The morphology and mode of movement of neural crest cells vary with the matrix in which they are grown and can be correlated with their speed of movement. Light and scanning electron microscopy reveal rounded, blebbing cells in matrices associated with slower translocation, whereas rounded cells with branching filopodia or lamellipodia are associated with rapid translocation. Bipolar cells with long processes are observed in cultures of rapidly moving cells that appear to be adhering strongly, as well as in cultures of cells that are stationary for long periods. These data, considered with the known distribution of macromolecules in the early embryo, suggest the following: (1) Both collagen and fibronectin can act as preferred substrata for migration. (2) Chondroitin sulfate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan increase speed of movement, but probably do so by decreasing adhesiveness and thereby producing more frequent detachment. In the embryo, crest cells would most likely avoid regions containing high concentrations of chondroitin sulfate. (3) Hyaluronate cannot act as a substratum for migration, but in low concentrations it can open spaces in the matrix and consequently may stimulate movement. The complex interactions of combined matr  相似文献   

9.
Ice structure size in agar gel frozen by one-dimensional freezing was analyzed by mercury porosimetry. The mercury porosimetry for measuring ice structure size correlated well with the photographic results. The mean ice structure size was inversely proportional to the moving speed of the freezing front in accordance with the theory proposed by us before. Effects of additives, such as sucrose, sodium chloride, and urea, on the ice structure size were tested. With addition of these additives, the ice structure size increased as compared with the control with no additives. Addition of Triton X-100, however, substantially decreased the ice structure size, probably due to the reduction in the molecular diffusion rate of water at the ice-solution interface.  相似文献   

10.
Ice structure was photographically analyzed for frozen soy protein curd and egg albumin gel frozen under various conditions. Dendritic ice structure was observed growing from the cooling plate parallel to the direction of the heat flux. The change in the ice structure size was analyzed at different locations from the cooling plate in the plane perpendicular to the direction of heat flux. In accordance with the theoretical relationship proposed by us before, the mean ice structure size was inversely proportional to the moving speed of the freezing front and the proportionality constant was not very much different from the diffusion coefficient of water, showing the important role of the molcular diffusion mechanism in the process of ice crystal growth. For the freezing accompanied with supercooling, the ice structure became very small, reflecting the very rapid moving speed of the freezing front when supercooling ceased. The theoretical model by us had advantages over the models proposed in the literature for its simple theoretical basis and wider applicability.  相似文献   

11.
The Formation and Distribution of Ice within Forsythia Flower Buds   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Differential thermal analysis detected two freezing events when dormant forsythia (Forsythia viridissima Lindl.) flower buds were cooled. The first occurred just below 0°C, and was coincident with the freezing of adjacent woody tissues. The second exotherm appeared as a spike between −10 and −25°C and was correlated with the lethal low temperature. Although this pattern of freezing was similar to that observed in other woody species, differences were noted. Both direct observations of frozen buds and examination of buds freeze-fixed at −5°C demonstrated that ice formed within the developing flowers at temperatures above the second exotherm and lethal temperature. Ice crystals had formed within the peduncle and in the lower portions of the developing flower. Ice also formed within the scales. In forsythia buds, the developing floral organ did not freeze as a unit as noted in other species. Instead the low temperature exotherm appeared to correspond to the lethal freezing of supercooled water within the anthers and portions of the pistil.  相似文献   

12.
Crystal growth in native collagen gels has been used to determine the role of extracellular matrix macromolecules in biological calcification phenomena. In this system, type I collagen gels containing sodium phosphate and buffered at pH 7.4 are overlayed with a solution containing CaCl2. Crystals form in the collagen gel adjacent to the gel-solution interface. Conditions were determined which permit the growth of crystals of hydroxyapatite [Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2]. At a Ca/P molar ratio of 2:1, the minimum concentrations of calcium and phosphate necessary for precipitation of hydroxyapatite are 10 mM and 5 mM, respectively. Under these conditions, precipitation is initiated at 18-24h, and is maximal between 24h and 6 days. Addition of high concentrations of chondroitin 4-sulphate inhibits the formation of hydroxyapatite in collagen gels; initiation of precipitation is delayed, and the final (equilibrium) amount of precipitation is decreased. Inhibition of hydroxyapatite formation requires concentrations of chondroitin sulphate higher than those required to inhibit calcium pyrophosphate crystal formation.  相似文献   

13.
1. The effects of acid mucopolysaccharides and acid mucopolysaccharide-proteins on the size and rate of formation of fibril aggregates from collagen solutions in pH7.6 buffers were studied by turbidimetric and light-scattering methods. 2. Serum albumin, orosomucoid, methylated cellulose, chondroitin sulphate A and chondroitin sulphate C of molecular weight less than 20000, and hyaluronate of molecular weight less than 40000 did not influence rates of fibril formation. Chondroitin sulphate A, chondroitin sulphate C and hyaluronate of high molecular weight retarded the rate of fibril formation. This effect of high-molecular-weight chondroitin sulphate C decreased with increasing ionic strength. Heparin, though of low molecular weight (13000), was highly effective, as was also heparitin sulphate. The chondroitin sulphate-proteins of very high molecular weight were highly effective, despite the fact that for some preparations the component chondroitin sulphate chains had molecular weights much less than 20000. 3. Agents that had delayed fibril formation were also effective in producing an increase in degree of aggregation of fibrillar collagen, as indicated by dissymmetry changes observed in light-scattering experiments at low collagen concentrations. Methylated cellulose and heparin at 2.5mug./ml. were unusual in decreasing aggregation, but heparin at 0.25mug./ml. increased aggregation. Electron microscopy of gels showed fibrils and fibril aggregates with ;normal' collagen spacing and dimensions consistent with the light-scattering results. 4. The rates of electrical transport of agents and of solvent (electro-osmosis) through collagen gels indicated a contribution of molecular entanglement that increased with increase in molecular size of the agents. Electrostatic binding of heparin to collagen was noted. Binding to collagen during fibril formation was also found for heparitin sulphate and a chondroitin sulphate with extra sulphate groups. 5. Electrostatic binding of acid mucopolysaccharide-proteins to collagen may be an important factor in the organization and functioning of connective tissues at all stages of growth and development. Excluded-volume (molecular-entanglement) effects may also be important. These factors operate simultaneously and interact mutually so that precise assessment of their relative importance is difficult.  相似文献   

14.
Long-term cultures of somatic testicular cells derived from immature and pubertal rats were used to study the synthesis of proteoglycans (PG) and hyaluronic acid (HA). Labelled PG and HA in the culture medium, membrane-associated and intracellular pools were characterized by gel filtration, ion exchange chromatography and selected enzymatic and chemical treatments. Somatic cells synthesize a PG containing both heparan and chondroitin/dermatan sulfate (CS/DS) chains and a PG containing only CS/DS chains. No major qualitative changes in the type of PG were observed in cells derived from immature and pubertal animals. However, significant age-dependent differences in the cell distribution pattern of PG and HA were determined. This may have implications in the regulation of spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
35S-labelled chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans isolated from conditioned media of cultured human monocytes (day 1in vitro) and monocyte-derived macrophages (day 6in vitro) were chromatographed on columns of immobilized fibronectin and collagen, respectively. The elution profiles prior to and after alkali treatment were compared with those of standards chondroitin 4-sulfate and chondroitin sulfate E and heparin. The day 635S-proteoglycans have a higher sulfate density than the day 1 species, but this difference did not affect the elution profiles after chromatography on collagen-Sepharose, whereas the day 6 proteoglycans bound more firmly than the day 1 fraction to fibronectin-Sepharose. The elution patterns obtained for these distinct proteoglycans closely resembled those of heparin and oversulfated chondroitin sulfate E standards, and clearly demonstrated the importance of sulfate density both for the affinity to fibronectin and collagen. Neither day 1 nor day 635S-proteoglycans were found to interact with hyaluronate.Abbreviations used CSPG chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan - GAG glycosaminoglycan - CS chondroitin sulfate - CS-E chondroitin 4,6 disulfate - MDM monocyte-derived macrophages  相似文献   

16.
Abstract A freeze-fixation technique was used to examine the distribution of ice crystals and the pattern of freezing in peach flower buds. In dormant buds, ice crystals formed at localized sites within the bud axis and scales. Ice crystal formation disrupted tissues and mechanical injury from repetitive freezethaw cycles was apparent. There was evidence of ice formation in the floral organs of dormant buds exposed to ?25°C but none observed in buds exposed to either ?5 or ?10°C. The distribution of ice crystals was different in deacclimated buds. In addition to large ice crystals within the subtending bud axis and scales, evidence of large crystals within the developing floral organs was noted. These crystals were most prominent in the lower portions of the developing flower and peduncle, and caused a separation of the epidermal layer from adjacent cells. The distribution of ice crystals within both dormant and deacclimated peach flower buds corroborated the results of previous thermal analysis experiments.  相似文献   

17.
This study demonstrates how the mechanical strength of a series of collagen/composite gels can be measured using a penetrometer. It was found that the presence of fibrin in collagen gels resulted in increased gel strength. Similarly hyaluronic acid was found to increase the strength of collagen gels. Addition of heparin weakened collagen gels as did chondroitin-6-sulphate. Neutrophil migration into collagen gels was found to be inversely proportional to gel strength. Fibrin and hyaluronic acid containing gels inhibited neutrophil migration while the presence of heparin and chondroitin sulphate increased neutrophil migration. BHK gel contraction experiments demonstrated how the presence of fibrin prevents gel contraction. Despite increasing gel strength the presence of hyaluronic acid appeared to have no effect on BHK contraction of collagen gels. Similarly the presence of heparin or chondroitin sulphate had no effect on gel contraction by BHK cells.  相似文献   

18.
Previously, we reported that the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) hyaluronic acid (HA) specifically bound to the plasma protein fibrinogen [LeBoeuf, R. D., Raja, R. R., Fuller, G. M., & Weigel, P. H. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 12586]. The binding of other macromolecules to fibrinogen could influence the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin. Therefore, we tested whether HA and other GAGs could alter the kinetics of fibrin polymer formation and the physical structure of the resulting gel. In this study, we present data showing that the GAGs HA and chondroitin sulfate (CS) affect fibrin formation in three specific ways: (i) they decreased the clotting time of fibrinogen 3-10-fold; (ii) both GAGs increase significantly the rate of fibrin polymer formation; and (iii) fibrin gels containing HA or CS had a final A450 that was greater than controls, indicating that these two glycosaminoglycans influence either the final size of fibrin fibrils or the extent of the lateral association between fibrils. These results demonstrate that the interactions of HA and CS with forming fibrin polymers can alter both the kinetics of formation and may produce structural changes in fibrin gels.  相似文献   

19.
Ice crystals formed in tissues during cryosurgery. I. Light microscopy   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
D K Whittaker 《Cryobiology》1974,11(3):192-201
The size and distribution of ice crystals formed during cryosurgical procedures in intact animals are not clear. In the present experiment oral mucosa was frozen in situ by means of a surface applied cold probe and was excised and freeze substituted while in the frozen state. It was shown that the form of the frozen tissue was preserved during this procedure and the area frozen was divisible into a zone representing the central part of the lesion and a peripheral zone separating this from normal tissue. Ice crystals within the body of the lesion were intracellular in location but varied somewhat in size. Ice crystals in the boundary zone appeared to be intracellular in the epithelium and both intra- and extracellular in the muscle fibres.It is suggested that the intracellular crystals in the body of the frozen area result in cell death while the extracellular ice in the boundary zone results in a less predictable response.  相似文献   

20.
Frozen thin sections and sections from freeze-dried and embedded tissue are used for the autoradiographic localization of diffusible substances at the electron microscope level. The presence of ice crystals in such sections may limit the autoradiographic resolution. Ice crystals are formed during freezing and may grow during subsequent processing of tissue. The contribution of ice crystal growth to the final image was estimated by measuring the distribution of the ice crystal sizes in freeze-etch replicas and in sections from freeze-dried and embedded tissues. A surface layer (10-15 mu) without visible ice crystals was present in both preparations. Beneath this surface layer the diameter of ice crystals increased towards the interior with the same relationship between crystal size and distance from the surface in the freeze-etch preparation as in the freeze-dry preparation. Ice crystal growth occurring during a much longer time during freeze-drying compared to freeze-etching does not significantly contribute to the final image in the electron microscope. The formation of ice crystals during freezing determines to a large extent the image (and therefore the autoradiographic resolution) of freeze-dry preparations and this probably holds also for thin cryosections of which examples are given.  相似文献   

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