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1.
Epiphyses of the proximal tibiae of 7-week-old normal and homozygous recessive brachymorphic mice (bm/bm) were immunostained using a monoclonal antibody to basic fibroblast growth factor to determine its expression in growth plate cartilage, osteoblasts on the surfaces of the primary spongiosa and articular cartilage. In the normal growth plate, the immunoreactive factor was present in chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones but absent from lower hypertrophic chondrocytes. Immunostaining was present only in the territorial extracellular matrix immediately adjacent to the chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa stained heavily in normal mice. Strong staining was observed in intermediate zone articular chondrocytes. Cells in the superficial layer of articular cartilage were unstained. The extracellular matrix of the articular cartilage was completely free of immunostaining. In contrast, the reduced size of bm/bm growth plates was accompanied by significantly reduced staining intensity in proliferating and upper hypertrophic chondrocytes, and staining was absent from the territorial extracellular matrix of all zones of the bm/bm growth plate. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa of bm/bm mice stained less than those of normal mice. Articular cartilage chondrocytes in the intermediate zone stained with less intensity in bm/bm mice, and the cells of the superficial layer were unstained. The extracellular matrix of bm/bm articular cartilage was completely free of staining. Brachymorphic epiphyseal growth plate and articular chondrocytes, and osteoblasts in the primary spongiosa, express reduced amounts of immunoreactive fibroblast growth factor-2. This phenotypical characteristic may be associated with abnormal endochondral ossification and development of bone in brachymorphic mice  相似文献   

2.
Epiphyses of the proximal tibiae of 7-week-old normal and homozygous recessive brachymorphic mice (bm/bm) were immunostained using a monoclonal antibody to basic fibroblast growth factor to determine its expression in growth plate cartilage, osteoblasts on the surfaces of the primary spongiosa and articular cartilage. In the normal growth plate, the immunoreactive factor was present in chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones but absent from lower hypertrophic chondrocytes. Immunostaining was present only in the territorial extracellular matrix immediately adjacent to the chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa stained heavily in normal mice. Strong staining was observed in intermediate zone articular chondrocytes. Cells in the superficial layer of articular cartilage were unstained. The extracellular matrix of the articular cartilage was completely free of immunostaining. In contrast, the reduced size of bm/bm growth plates was accompanied by significantly reduced staining intensity in proliferating and upper hypertrophic chondrocytes, and staining was absent from the territorial extracellular matrix of all zones of the bm/bm growth plate. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa of bm/bm mice stained less than those of normal mice. Articular cartilage chondrocytes in the intermediate zone stained with less intensity in bm/bm mice, and the cells of the superficial layer were unstained. The extracellular matrix of bm/bm articular cartilage was completely free of staining. Brachymorphic epiphyseal growth plate and articular chondrocytes, and osteoblasts in the primary spongiosa, express reduced amounts of immunoreactive fibroblast growth factor-2. This phenotypical characteristic may be associated with abnormal endochondral ossification and development of bone in brachymorphic mice  相似文献   

3.
Light microscopy, including immunohistochemical techniques, and electron microscopy were performed on epiphyseal growth cartilage from brachymorphic (bm/bm) mice and age-matched phenotypically normal siblings aged 5, 16 and 25 days. In the bm/bm mice light microscopy showed a disturbed columnar arrangement and numerous chondrocytes with pronounced regressive changes. The normal development of proliferative cells into hypertrophic cells was halted and thus only a rather small and ill-defined hypertrophic zone was seen. The calcifying zone was irregular and the normal lacunae were replaced by a densely staining matrix. Using immunofluorescence techniques, the presence of considerable amounts of both type II and type V collagen was demonstrated in the bm/bm mice, while the cartilage from controls contained only type II. Ultrastructurally the lacunar matrix contained bundles of fine fibrils without the typical collagen periodicity which might indicate synthesis of a defective procollagen. Our observations together with the previously demonstrated deficiency of 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulphate, illustrate the complexity of the growth cartilage disturbance in the bm/bm mouse. Most of our findings are at variance with those described in the literature and possible pathogenetic mechanisms for the observed alterations in the growth cartilage are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Biosynthesis of the undersulfated proteoglycan found in brachymorphic mouse (bm/ bm) cartilage has been investigated. Similar amounts of cartilage proteoglycan core protein, as measured by radioimmune inhibition assay, and comparable activity levels of four of the glycosyltransferases requisite for synthesis of chondroitin sulfate chains were found in cartilage homogenates from neonatal bm/bm and normal mice, suggesting normal production of glycosylated core protein acceptor for sulfation. When incubated with 35S-labeled 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS), bm/bm cartilage extracts showed a higher than control level of sulfotransferase activity. In contrast, when synthesis was initiated from ATP and 35SO42?, mutant cartilage extracts showed lower incorporation of 35SO42? into endogenous chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (19% of control level) and greatly reduced formation of PAPS (10% of control level). Results from coincubations of normal and mutant cartilage extracts exhibited intermediate levels of sulfate incorporation into PAPS and endogenous acceptors, suggesting the absence of an inhibitor for sulfate-activating enzymes or sulfotransferases. Degradation rates of 35S]PAPS and of 35S-labeled adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (APS) were comparable in bm/bm and normal cartilage extracts. Specific assays for both ATP sulfurylase (sulfate adenylyltransferase; ATP:sulfate adenylyltransferase, EC 2.7.7.4) and APS kinase (adenylylsulfate kinase; ATP:adenylylsulfate 3′-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.25) showed decreases in the former (50% of control) and the latter (10–15% of control) enzyme activities in bm/bm cartilage extracts. Both enzyme activities were reduced to intermediate levels in extracts of cartilage from heterozygous brachymorphic mice (ATP-sulfurylase, 80% of control; APS kinase, 40–70% of control). Furthermore, the moderate reduction in ATP sulfurylase activity in bm/bm cartilage extracts was accompanied by increased lability to freezing and thawing of the residual activity of this enzyme. These results indicate that under-sulfation of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan in bm/bm cartilage is due to a defect in synthesis of the sulfate donor (PAPS), resulting from diminished activities of both ATP sulfurylase and APS kinase, although the reduced activity of the latter enzyme seems to be primarily responsible for the defect in PAPS synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
Homozygous brachymorphic (bm/bm) mice have a disproportionately short stature. Previous studies have shown that the cartilage proteoglycan is undersulfated as a result of decreased 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS) levels. In the studies reported here, PAPS synthesizing activity was found to be decreased in both skin fibroblasts and prechondrogenic mesenchyme, but sulfation of glycosaminoglycan was normal in those tissues unless glycosaminoglycan synthesis was enhanced by β-d-xyloside. Furthermore, undersulfation was correlated with increased proteoglycan synthesis as the limb mesenchyme cultures underwent chondrogenesis, and sulfation proceeded in an “all or none” manner. These observations demonstrate that the molecular defect in bm/bm mice is not restricted to cartilage, but is manifested there because of the large amount of chondroitin sulfate synthesized.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Mutations in the sulfate transporter gene, SCL26A2, lead to cartilage proteoglycan undersulfation resulting in chondrodysplasia in humans; the phenotype is mirrored in the diastrophic dysplasia (dtd) mouse. It remains unclear whether bone shortening and deformities are caused solely by changes in the cartilage matrix, or whether chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan undersulfation affects also signalling pathways involved in cell proliferation and differentiation. Therefore we studied macromolecular sulfation in the different zones of the dtd mouse growth plate and these data were related to growth plate histomorphometry and proliferation analysis.A 2-fold increase of non-sulfated disaccharide in dtd animals compared to wild-type littermates in the resting, proliferative and hypertrophic zones was detected indicating proteoglycan undersulfation; among the three zones the highest level of undersulfation was in the resting zone. The relative height of the hypertrophic zone and the average number of cells per column in the proliferative and hypertrophic zones were significantly reduced compared to wild-types; however the total height of the growth plate was within normal values. The chondrocyte proliferation rate, measured by bromodeoxyuridine labelling, was also significantly reduced in mutant mice. Immunohistochemistry combined with expression data of the dtd growth plate demonstrated that the sulfation defect alters the distribution pattern, but not expression, of Indian hedgehog, a long range morphogen required for chondrocyte proliferation and differentiation.These data suggest that in dtd mice proteoglycan undersulfation causes reduced chondrocyte proliferation in the proliferative zone via the Indian hedgehog pathway, therefore contributing to reduced long bone growth.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Rheumatoid arthritis, a disease of unknown aetiology, is characterized by joint inflammation and, in its later stages, cartilage destruction. Inflammatory mediators may exert not only suppression of matrix synthesis but also cartilage degradation, which eventually leads to severe cartilage depletion. Systemically and locally produced growth factors and hormones regulate cartilage metabolism. Alterations in levels of these factors or in their activity can influence the pathogenesis of articular cartilage destruction in arthritic joints. The main topic of the present review is the role of the anabolic factor insulin-like growth factor-1 in the regulation of chondrocyte metabolic functions in normal and in diseased cartilage. This is the most important growth factor that balances chondrocyte proteoglycan synthesis and catabolism to maintain a functional cartilage matrix. A brief overview of how chondrocytes keep the cartilage matrix intact, and how catabolic and anabolic vactors are thought to be involved in pathological cartilage destruction precedes the review of the role of this growth factor in proteoglycan metabolism in cartilage.  相似文献   

9.
The chubby (cby) mutant is a previously undescribed skeletal mutation in the mouse. Breeding experiments showed that cby is a recessive mutant with complete viability, full penetrance and fertility in both sexes. Tests for allelism showed that the cby mutant is genetically unlike the somewhat similar mutants, stumpy (stm), pituitary dwarf (dw), spondylometaphyseal chondrodysplasia (smc), brachymorphic (bm), and achondroplasia (cn). The defects seem to occur mainly in growth cartilage. Microradiography revealed increased height of the epiphyseal growth plate and irregular bone trabeculae in the metaphysis. Light microscopy showed disturbed columnar organization of proliferative chondrocytes and pronounced signs of cellular disintegration. The hypertrophic zone, however, contained normally shaped chondrocytes arranged in regular columns. In spite of the normal cellular hypertrophy the pattern of cartilage mineralization was disturbed. The electron microscopy studies revealed very high amounts of matrix vesicles and numerous larger membrane coated structures in the extracellular matrix. Biochemical analysis of the affected growth cartilage revealed a slightly modified pattern of proteoglycan subpopulations and considerably longer chondroitin sulfate chains when compared with controls. From the present study it can be concluded that the cby mutant is a genetically and morphologically distinct condition with characteristic, somewhat rickets-like stigmata. The pathogenetic mechanism underlying the condition remains to be clarified.  相似文献   

10.
The cartilage matrix deficiency (cmd/cmd) mouse fails to synthesize the core protein of cartilage-characteristic proteoglycan (cartilage PG). Chondrocytes from the cmd/cmd cartilage cultured in vitro produced nodules with greatly reduced extracellular matrix. Immunofluorescence staining revealed that the nodules of mutant cells differed from the normal in lacking cartilage PG and in uneven and reduced deposition of type II collagen. Exogenously added cartilage PG prepared from either normal mouse cartilage or Swarm rat chondrosarcoma to the culture medium was incorporated exclusively into the extracellular matrices of the nodules, with a concurrent correction of the abnormal distribution pattern of type II collagen. The incorporation of cartilage PG into the matrix was disturbed by hyaluronic acid or decasaccharide derived therefrom, suggesting that the incorporation process involves the interaction of added proteoglycan with hyaluronic acid. Both the hyaluronic acid-binding region and the protein-enriched core molecule prepared from rat chondrosarcoma cartilage PG could also be incorporated but, unlike the intact cartilage PG, they were distributed equally in the surrounding zones where fibroblast-like cells predominate. The results indicate that the intact form of cartilage PG is required for specific incorporation into the chondrocyte nodules, and further suggest that cartilage PG plays a regulatory role in the assembly of the matrix macromolecules.  相似文献   

11.
The hypothesis is widely held that, in growth plate during endochondral ossification, proteoglycans in the extracellular matrix of the lower hypertrophic zone are degraded by proteases and removed before mineralization, and that this is the mechanism by which a noncalcifiable matrix is transformed into a calcifiable matrix. We have evaluated this hypothesis by examining the immunofluorescent localization and concentrations of proteoglycan monomer core protein and link protein, and the concentrations of glycosaminoglycans demonstrated by safranin 0 staining, in the different zones of the bovine fetal cartilage growth plate. Monospecific antibodies were prepared to proteoglycan monomer core protein and to link protein. The immunofluorescent localization of these species was examined in decalcified and undecalcified sections containing the zones of proliferating and hypertrophic chondrocytes and in sections containing the zones of proliferating and hypertrophic chondrocytes and the metaphysis, decalcified in 0.5 M EDTA, pH 7.5, in the presence of protease inhibitors. Proteoglycan monomer core protein and link protein are demonstrable without detectable loss throughout the extracellular matrix of the longitudinal septa of the hypertrophic zone and in the calcified cartilage of the metaphysis. In fact, increased staining is observed in the calcifying cartilage. Contrary to the prevailing hypothesis, our results indicate that there is no net loss of proteoglycans during mineralization and that the proteoglycans become entombed in the calcified cartilage which provides a scaffolding on which osteoid and bone are formed. Proteoglycans appear to persist unaltered in the calcified cartilage core of the trabeculae, until at last the entire trabeculae are eroded from their surfaces and removed by osteoclasts, when the primary spongiosa is replaced by the secondary spongiosa.  相似文献   

12.
Mature cartilage contains pericellular regions of matrix of fine texture, consisting of filamentous material and granules containing proteoglycan. Intercellular matrix contains collagen fibres with structural elements resembling those of the pericellular regions in the spaces between the fibres. Membrane bound bodies may be present at the margin of the pericellular region. Histochemically, chondroitin sulphate is found in the pericellular region in all zones but keratan sulphate is similarly stainable only in the deep zones of ageing cartilage.  相似文献   

13.
Chondrodysplasia of gene knockout mice for aggrecan and link protein   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The proteoglycan aggregate of the cartilage is composed of aggrecan, link protein, and hyaluronan and forms a unique gel-like moiety that provides resistance to compression in joints and a foundational cartilage structure critical for growth plate formation. Aggrecan, a large chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, is one of the major structural macromolecules in cartilage and binds both hyaluronan and link protein through its N-terminal domain G1. Link protein, a small glycoprotein, is homologous to the G1 domain of aggrecan. Mouse cartilage matrix deficiency (cmd) is caused by a functional null mutation of the aggrecan gene and is characterized by perinatal lethal dwarfism and craniofacial abnormalities. Link protein knockout mice show chondrodysplasia similar to but milder than cmd mice, suggesting a supporting role of link protein for the aggregate structure. Analysis of these mice revealed that the proteoglycan aggregate plays an important role in cartilage development and maintenance of cartilage tissue and may provide a clue to the identification of human genetic disorders caused by mutations in these genes. Published in 2003.  相似文献   

14.
This study examined the influence of 24,25 (OH)2D3, an active metabolite of vitamin D, on the growth and development of cartilage cells in condylar cartilage of suckling mice. It became evident that when the hormone was administered even at high doses, it did not significantly affect the incorporation of [3H]thymidine, but led to a marked decrease in the number of both chondroblasts and hypertrophic chondrocytes. At the same time, condyle of hormone-treated mice reached an increase in the number of mesenchymelike cells within the chondroprogenitor zone. High values of correlation were noted between the overall dimensions of the condylar cartilage and those of the chondroblastic and hypertrophic zones. The hormone also significantly reduced the degree of matrix metachromasia (indicative of proteoglycan content) and concomitantly altered the mineralization pattern of the cartilaginous matrix. This study indicates that in young animals increased doses of 24,25(OH)2D3 do not affect the proliferative activity of chondroprogenitor cells yet possess an inhibitory effect upon the capacity of the latter cells to differentiate into chondroblasts. The hormone also seems to affect the already differentiated cells--chondroblasts and hypertrophic chondrocytes--both structurally as well as metabolically. In so doing, this metabolite of vitamin D affects the normal process of endochondral bone formation in one of the mandible's main growth sites. Thus, in the developing animal, elevated concentrations of 24,25(OH)2D3 may impair the growing mandible's ability to achieve its normal size and shape.  相似文献   

15.
Monospecific antibodies to cartilage proteoglycan monomer and link protein were employed with immunofluorescence microscopy to determine the tissue distribution of these constituents during matrix-induced endochondral bone development. Subcutaneous implantation of demineralized diaphyseal bone matrix resulted in new endochondral bone formation. On Day 3, the implant consisted of mesenchymal tissue which did not contain any demonstrable cartilage-related proteoglycan or link protein. With the onset of early chondrogenesis on Day 5, cartilage proteoglycan monomer and link protein were first localized together in the cartilage matrix, particularly around chondrocytes in territorial sites. Progressively more staining around cells was observed at Days 7 and 9. On Day 9, when mineralization was first observed, there was no evidence of a net loss of these molecules prior to mineralization of the cartilage matrix. On Day 11 and thereafter, bone formation was observed by appositional growth on calcified cartilage spicules. Whereas the osteoblasts and bone matrix were devoid of any staining for cartilage proteoglycan and link components, the residual, partly mineralized cartilage spicules still reacted with antibodies to cartilage proteoglycan monomer and link protein in territorial sites, but in reduced amounts, indicating a loss of these molecules associated with a loss of hypertrophic chondrocytes. Since mineral prevented the access of Fab' antibody subunits, demineralization after fixation was routinely employed. The results reveal that cartilage proteoglycan monomer and link protein are present around chondrocytes in hyaline cartilage during the early stages of endochondral bone formation and that there is no net loss of these molecules prior to mineralization of this cartilage matrix as was previously thought.  相似文献   

16.
1. Proteoglycan was isolated from growth cartilage of normal and rachitic chicks. 2. The proteoglycan from normal cartilage showed differences in chemical composition and physical properties from a comparable fraction isolated from bovine nasal cartilage. 3. The proteoglycan from rachitic-chick cartilage was of smaller size than tis normal counterpart, though of similar average chemical composition. 4. Differences between proteoglycan from normal and rachitic cartilages can be explained in terms of limited proteolytic cleavage.  相似文献   

17.
For a large part, skeletal development, growth, and repair occur by endochondral ossification which comprises an orderly sequence of consecutive steps of proliferation and late differentiation of chondrocytes. After vascular invasion into hypertrophic cartilage, the tissue is remodelled into bone. At all stages, the process is under tight environmental control exerted by a combination of regulators, including nutritional supply and signalling through growth factors, hormones, and cell-matrix-interactions. Therefore, genetic elimination of collagen IX, a stabilizing component of the periphery of thin cartilage fibrils, is expected to compromise extracellular matrix properties and, hence, the chondrocyte environment required for normal cartilage development and homeostasis. Here, we have shown that growth plate cartilage morphology is markedly disturbed in mice lacking collagen IX. Abnormalities were most prominent in late proliferative, pre-hypertrophic, and hypertrophic zones whereas resting and early proliferative zones were less affected. In central epiphyseal regions of long bones, newborn animals show grossly abnormal areas with strongly reduced cell numbers, irregular distribution of glycosaminoglycans in the extracellular matrix, and a profoundly disturbed columnar arrangement of chondrocytes with an irregular beta1 integrin immunostaining. As a result, all long bones are shorter and broader in newborn Col9a1-/- mice. Remarkably, these abnormalities are attenuated in adult mice, but the number of cells per area still is too low due to reduced cell proliferation.  相似文献   

18.
The severe lethal chondrodystrophies in man result in a common clinical syndrome including shortening of the face, mandible, and limbs. Studies of three lethal chondrodystrophic mutants in mice, viz., chondrodysplasia (cho), cartilage matrix deficiency (cmd), and disproportionate micromelia (Dmm), which share this syndrome, were performed with the aim of identifying histochemical, immunofluorescence, or ultrastructural differences which might exist among these hereditary cartilage disorders. We examined limb cartilage epiphyses from day 18 normal and mutant fetuses and observed repeatable, mostly qualitative differences. All observations were made relative to the normal control. Histochemical staining of matrix proteoglycan was moderately decreased in cho and Dmm cartilage and markedly decreased in cmd when compared to the normal control. Staining of matrix collagen was irregular in distribution in cho, increased in cmd, and decreased in Dmm. Immunofluorescence of proteoglycan was increased in the matrix of cho and Dmm and decreased in cmd. Immunofluorescence of type II collagen was heterogeneous and moderately decreased in the matrix of cho, increased in cmd, and markedly decreased in Dmm. Immunofluorescence of link protein in cho was localized in the cellular-pericellular region as in the normal and appeared increased in the matrix of cmd and Dmm. Immunofluorescence of chondronectin was localized in the cellular-pericellular region and appeared normal in all three mutants. Major differences in cellular and matrix ultrastructure were observed among the mutants, including a decreased frequency of small-diameter collagen fibrils in cho and Dmm, increased density of collagen fibrils in cmd, and dilated RER in Dmm. These observations demonstrate that distinct structural and possibly molecular differences exist among the chondrodystrophies. In the case of cmd, the differences correlated with a previously reported molecular defect, viz., absence of core protein of cartilage specific proteoglycan in the cartilage of this mutant. It is anticipated that the methods used in the present study can be applied to humans in case classification and in identifying potential mouse-human correlates.  相似文献   

19.
The expression and core protein structure of two proteoglycans, the major cartilage proteoglycan isolated from a rat chondrosarcoma and a small molecular weight chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan isolated from a rat yolk sac tumor, have been compared. The cartilage proteoglycan was not detectable in the cartilage tissue of cartilage matrix deficient (cmdcmd) neonatal mice by immunofluorescence, but the cmd cartilage did react with antibodies against the core protein of the yolk sac tumor proteoglycan. Radioimmunoassays showed that the core proteins of these proteoglycans are not cross-reactive with each other. Analysis of the core proteins by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after chondroitinase ABC treatment of the proteoglycan revealed a large difference in their sizes. The cartilage proteoglycan core protein had a molecular weight of about 200,000 while the yolk sac tumor proteoglycan core protein migrated with an apparent molecular weight of about 20,000. In addition, the cultured yolk sac tumor cells that make the small proteoglycan did not react with antiserum against the cartilage proteoglycan. These results indicate that the proteoglycan isolated from the yolk sac tumor is similar to the small chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan species found in cartilage and support the existence of at least two dissimilar and genetically independent chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan core proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies have shown that a peptide identical in sequence to the N-terminal of link protein can function as a growth factor and up-regulate proteoglycan synthesis by human articular cartilage in explant culture (L. A. McKenna et al., Arthritis Rheum. 41, 157-162, 1998). The present study has extended these investigations to determine the effects of this peptide on the synthesis of collagen, another essential component of normal cartilage matrix. Explants from normal adult knee cartilage were maintained for periods of up to 8 days in medium with or without serum. Peptides were added during each day of culture. Synthesis of collagen was determined by the incorporation of [3H]proline into hydroxyproline and proteoglycans by incorporation of [35S]sulfate. The type of newly synthesized collagen was measured by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, fluorography, and immunoblotting. The link protein peptide stimulated synthesis of type II collagen in cartilage from a number of different subjects. Maximum up-regulation of synthesis was attained at a concentration of 100 ng/ml, similar to that observed previously for up-regulation of proteoglycan. Synthesis was up-regulated in both the presence and the absence of serum, although the overall rate of synthesis was greater when serum was added. The findings that this link peptide growth factor stimulated synthesis of proteins, including collagen, in a manner analogous to that shown previously for proteoglycans support the hypothesis that this peptide may have an important role in the feedback control of cartilage matrix synthesis.  相似文献   

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