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1.
Our recent studies suggested that decreased collagen synthesis in bone and cartilage of scorbutic guinea pigs was not related to ascorbate-dependent proline hydroxylation. The decrease paralleled scurvy-induced weight loss and reduced proteoglycan synthesis. Those results led us to propose that the effects of ascorbate deficiency on extracellular matrix synthesis were caused by changes in humoral factors similar to those that occur in fasting. Here we present evidence for this proposal. Exposure of chick embryo chondrocytes to scorbutic guinea pig serum, in the presence of ascorbate, led to effects on extracellular matrix synthesis similar to those seen in scorbutic animals. The rates of collagen and proteoglycan synthesis were reduced to approximately 30-50% of the levels in cells cultured in normal guinea pig serum plus ascorbate, but proline hydroxylation and procollagen secretion were unaffected. Similar results were obtained with serum from fasted guinea pigs supplemented in vivo with ascorbate. The growth rate of the chondrocytes was not significantly affected by scorbutic guinea pig serum.  相似文献   

2.
Our previous work showed that vitamin C deficiency caused about a 70-80% decrease in the incorporation of [35S]sulfate into proteoglycan of guinea pig costal cartilage, coordinately with a decrease in collagen synthesis (Bird, T. A., Spanheimer, R. G., and Peterkofsky, B. (1986) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 246, 42-51). We examined the mechanism for decreased proteoglycan synthesis by labeling normal and scorbutic cartilage in vitro with radioactive precursors. Proteoglycan monomers from scorbutic tissue were of a slightly smaller average hydrodynamic size than normal but there was no difference in the size of the glycosaminoglycan chains isolated after papain digestion. The type of glycosaminoglycans synthesized and the degree of sulfation were unaffected as determined by chondroitinase ABC digestion and duel labeling with [35S]sulfate and [3H]glucosamine. Conversion of [3H]glucosamine to [3H]galactosamine also was unimpaired. There was about a 40% decrease in core protein synthesis, measured by [14C]serine incorporation and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Nevertheless, decreased incorporation of [35S]sulfate into scorbutic tissue persisted in the presence of p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xyloside and cycloheximide, which indicated that the site of the scorbutic defect was beyond core protein synthesis and xylosylation. Galactosyltransferase activity in scorbutic cartilage decreased to about one-third the levels in control samples in parallel with the decreases in proteoglycan and collagen synthesis. Our results suggest that the step catalyzed by this enzyme activity, the addition of galactose to xylose prior to chondroitin sulfate chain elongation, is the major site of the scorbutic defect in proteoglycan synthesis. Decreased enzyme activity may be related to increased cortisol levels in scorbutic serum.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of ascorbic acid deficiency and acute fasting (with ascorbate supplementation) on the synthesis of collagen and proteoglycan in costal cartilages from young guinea pigs was determined by in vitro labeling of these components with radioactive proline and sulfate, respectively. Both parameters were coordinately decreased by the second week on a vitamin C-free diet, with a continued decline to 20-30% of control values by the fourth week. These effects were quite specific, since incorporation of proline into noncollagenous protein was reduced by only 30% after 4 weeks on the deficient diet. The time course of the decrease in collagen and proteoglycan synthesis paralleled the loss of body weight induced by ascorbate deficiency. Hydroxylation of proline in collagen synthesized by scorbutic costal cartilage was reduced to about 60% of normal relatively early, and remained at that level thereafter. Neither collagen nor proteoglycan synthesis was returned to normal by the addition of ascorbate (0.2 mM) to cartilage in vitro. Administration of a single dose of ascorbate to scorbutic guinea pigs increased liver ascorbate and restored proline hydroxylation to normal levels by 24 h, but failed to increase the synthesis of collagen or proteoglycan. Synthesis of both extracellular matrix components was restored to control levels after four daily doses of ascorbate. A 96-h total fast, with ascorbate supplementation, produced rates of weight loss and decreases in the synthesis of these two components similar to those produced by acute scurvy. There was a linear correlation between changes in collagen and proteoglycan synthesis and changes in body weight during acute fasting, scurvy, and its reversal. These results suggest that it is the fasting state induced by ascorbate deficiency, rather than a direct action of the vitamin in either of these two biosynthetic pathways, which is the primary regulatory factor.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Cultured human articular and costal chondrocytes were used as a model system to examine the effects of recombinant gamma-interferon (IFN-gamma) on synthesis of procollagens, the steady state levels of types I and II procollagen mRNAs, and the expression of major histocompatibility complex class II (Ia-like) antigens on the cell surface. Adult articular chondrocytes synthesized mainly type II collagen during weeks 1-3 of primary culture, whereas types I and III collagens were also produced after longer incubation and predominated after the first subculture. Juvenile costal chondrocytes synthesized no detectable alpha 2(I) collagen chains until after week 1 of primary culture; type II collagen was the predominant species even after weeks of culture. The relative amounts of types I and II collagens synthesized were reflected in the levels of alpha 1(I), alpha 2(I), and alpha 1(II) procollagen mRNAs. In articular chondrocytes, the levels of alpha 1(I) procollagen mRNA were disproportionately low (alpha 1(I)/alpha 2(I) less than 1.0) compared with costal chondrocytes (alpha 1 (I)/alpha 2(I) approximately 2). Recombinant IFN-gamma (0.1-100 units/ml) inhibited synthesis of type II as well as types I and III collagens associated with suppression of the levels of alpha 1(I), alpha 2(I), and alpha 1(II) procollagen mRNAs. IFN-gamma suppressed the levels of alpha 1(I) and alpha 1(II) procollagen mRNAs to a greater extent than alpha 2(I) procollagen mRNA in articular but not in costal chondrocytes. Human leukocyte interferon (IFN-alpha) at 1000 units/ml suppressed collagen synthesis and procollagen mRNA levels to a similar extent as IFN-gamma at 1.0 unit/ml. In addition, IFN-gamma but not IFN-alpha induced the expression of HLA-DR antigens on intact cells. The lymphokine IFN-gamma could, therefore, have a role in suppressing cartilage matrix synthesis in vivo under conditions in which the chondrocytes are in proximity to T lymphocytes and their products.  相似文献   

6.
The ability of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) to stimulate cartilage matrix synthesis is reduced in aged and osteoarthritic cartilage. Aging and osteoarthritis are associated with an increase in reactive oxygen species, which we hypothesized would interfere with normal IGF-I signaling. We compared IGF-I signaling in normal and osteoarthritic human articular chondrocytes and investigated the effects of oxidative stress induced by tert-butylhydroperoxide (tBHP). In normal human chondrocytes, IGF-I initiated a strong and sustained phosphorylation of IRS-1 (Tyr-612) and Akt (Ser-473) and transient ERK phosphorylation. In contrast, in osteoarthritic chondrocytes, which possessed elevated basal IRS-1 (Ser-312) and ERK phosphorylation, IGF-I failed to stimulate IRS-1 (Tyr-612) or Akt phosphorylation. In normal human chondrocytes, tBHP triggered strong IRS-1 (Ser-312 and Ser-616) and ERK phosphorylation and inhibited IGF-I-induced IRS-1 (Tyr-612) and Akt phosphorylation. Lentivirus-mediated overexpression of constitutively active (CA) Akt significantly enhanced proteoglycan synthesis, whereas both dominant negative Akt and CA MEK inhibited proteoglycan synthesis. CA Akt also promoted type II collagen and Sox9 expression, whereas tBHP treatment and CA MEK inhibited aggrecan, collagen II, and Sox9 mRNA expression. In osteoarthritic chondrocytes, the antioxidants Mn(III) tetrakis(4-benzoic acid)porphyrin and N-acetylcysteine increased the ratio of Akt to ERK phosphorylation and promoted IGF-I-mediated proteoglycan synthesis. Chemical inhibition of ERK significantly enhanced IGF-I phosphorylation of Akt and alleviated tBHP inhibition of Akt phosphorylation. These results demonstrate opposing roles for phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt and MEK-ERK in cartilage matrix synthesis and suggest that elevated levels of reactive oxygen species cause chondrocyte IGF-I resistance by altering the balance of Akt to ERK activity.  相似文献   

7.
A quantitative determination of collagen expression was carried out in cultured chondrocytes obtained from a tissue that undergoes endochondral bone replacement (ventral vertebra) and one that does not (caudal sterna). The "short chain" collagen, type X is only expressed in the former while the other "short chain" collagen type IX, was primarily expressed in the latter. These two tissues also differ in that vertebral chondrocytes express moderate levels of both type I procollagen mRNAs which were translated into full length procollagen chains both in vivo and in vitro, while caudal sternal chondrocytes did not. The percent of collagen synthesis was about 50% in both cell types, but sternal cells expressed twice as much collagen as vertebral cells even though type II procollagen was more efficiently processed to alpha-chains in vertebral chondrocytes than in sternal chondrocytes. The number of type II procollagen mRNA molecules/cell was found to be about 2300 in vertebral chondrocytes and about 8000 in sternal cells, in good agreement with the results reported by Kravis and Upholt (Kravis, D., and Upholt, W. B. (1985) Dev. Biol. 108, 164-172). There were about 630 copies of type I procollagen mRNAs with an alpha 1/alpha 2 ratio of 1.6 in vertebral chondrocytes compared with 5100 copies and an alpha 1/alpha 2 ratio of 2.2 in osteoblasts, and less than 40 copies in sternal cells. Since the rate of type I collagen chain synthesis was 50 times greater in osteoblasts than in vertebral cells, type I procollagen mRNAs were about six times less efficiently translated in vertebral cells than in osteoblasts. The type I mRNAs in vertebral chondrocytes were polyadenylated and had 5' ends that were identical in osteoblasts, fibroblasts, and myoblasts. Moreover, type I mRNAs isolated from vertebral chondrocytes were translated into full length preprocollagen chains in vitro in rabbit reticulocyte lysates. Thus, chondrocytes isolated from cartilage tissues with different developmental fates differed quantitatively and qualitatively in total collagen synthesis, procollagen processing, and distribution of collagen types.  相似文献   

8.
D Demarquay  M F Dumontier  L Tsagris  J Bourguignon  V Nataf  M T Corvol 《Hormone research》1990,33(2-4):111-4; discussion 115
This paper reports data on the in vitro effects of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) on the phenotypic expression of epiphyseal chondrocytes grown in serum-free (SF) culture medium. bFGF mostly stimulates chondrocyte DNA and inhibits sulfated proteoglycan synthesis and type II collagen mRNA. On the contrary, IGF-I is poorly mitogenic but strongly stimulates protein synthesis and type II collagen mRNA. In addition, IGF-I prevents the expression of type I collagen gene. Lastly, chondrocytes cultured in SF medium are able to locally produce IGF-I peptides. In conclusion, IGF-I and bFGF have opposite effects on the phenotypic expression of chondrocytes in vitro: bFGF is mostly mitogenic and IGF-I appears to be a differentiating factor.  相似文献   

9.
Chick embryo sternal chondrocytes from the caudal and cephalic regions were cultured within type I collagen gels and type I collagen/proteoglycan aggregate composite gels in normal serum. Caudal region chondrocytes were also cultured within type I collagen gels in the presence of fibronectindepleted serum. There was a marked stimulation of type X collagen synthesis by the caudal region chondrocytes after 9 days in the presence of fibronectin-depleted serum and after 14 days in the presence of proteoglycan aggregate. These results provide evidence for the ability of chondrocytes from a zone of permanent cartilage to synthesise type X collagen and for the involvement of extracellular matrix components in the control of type X collagen gene expression.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In osteoarthritic cartilage, chondrocytes are able to present heterogeneous cellular reactions with expression and synthesis of the (pro)collagen types characteristic of prechondrocytes (type IIA), hypertrophic chondrocytes (type X), as well as differentiated (types IIB, IX, XI, VI) and dedifferentiated (types I, III) chondrocytes. The expression of type IIA procollagen in human osteoarthritic cartilage support the assumption that OA chondrocytes reverse their phenotype towards a chondroprogenitor phenotype. Recently, we have shown that dedifferentiation of mouse chondrocytes induced by subculture was associated with the alternative splicing of type II procollagen pre-mRNA with a switch from the IIB to the IIA form. In this context, we demonstrated that BMP-2 favours expression of type IIB whereas TGF-beta1 potentiates expression of type IIA induced by subculture. These data reveal the specific capability of BMP-2 to reverse the program of chondrocyte dedifferentiation. This interesting feature needs to be tested with human chondrocytes since cell amplification is required for the currently used autologous chondrocyte transplantation.  相似文献   

12.
For lack of sufficient human cartilage donors, chondrocytes isolated from various animal species are used for cartilage tissue engineering. The present study was undertaken to compare key features of cultured large animal and human articular chondrocytes of the knee joint. Primary chondrocytes were isolated from human, porcine, ovine and equine full thickness knee joint cartilage and investigated flow cytometrically for their proliferation rate. Synthesis of extracellular matrix proteins collagen type II, cartilage proteoglycans, collagen type I, fibronectin and cytoskeletal organization were studied in freshly isolated or passaged chondrocytes using immunohistochemistry and western blotting. Chondrocytes morphology, proliferation, extracellular matrix synthesis and cytoskeleton assembly differed substantially between these species. Proliferation was higher in animal derived compared with human chondrocytes. All chondrocytes expressed a cartilage-specific extracellular matrix. However, after monolayer expansion, cartilage proteoglycan expression was barely detectable in equine chondrocytes whereby fibronectin and collagen type I deposition increased compared with porcine and human chondrocytes. Animal-derived chondrocytes developed more F-actin fibers during culturing than human chondrocytes. With respect to proliferation and extracellular matrix synthesis, human chondrocytes shared more similarity with porcine than with ovine or equine chondrocytes. These interspecies differences in chondrocytes in vitro biology should be considered when using animal models.  相似文献   

13.
The aim of this work was to prepare specific antibodies against skin and bone collagen (type I) and cartilage collagen (type II) for the study of differential collagen synthesis during development of the chick embryo by immunofluorescence. Antibodies against native type I collagen from chick cranial bone, and native pepsin-extracted type II collagen from chick sternal cartilage were raised in rabbits, rats, and guinea pigs. The antibodies, purified by cross-absorption on the heterologous collagen type, followed by absorption and elution from the homologous collagen type, were specific according to passive hemagglutination tests and indirect immunofluorescence staining of chick bone and cartilage tissues. Antibodies specific to type I collagen labeled bone trabeculae from tibia and perichondrium from sternal cartilage. Antibodies specific to type II collagen stained chondrocytes of sternal and epiphyseal cartilage, whereas fluorescence with intercellular cartilage collagen was obtained only after treatment with hyaluronidase. Applying type II collagen antibodies to sections of chick embryos, the earliest cartilage collagen found was in the notochord, at stage 15, followed by vertebral collagen secreted by sclerotome cells adjacent to the notochord from stage 25 onwards. Type I collagen was found in the dermatomal myotomal plate and presumptive dermis at stage 17, in limb mesenchyme at stage 24, and in the perichondrium of tibiae at stage 31.  相似文献   

14.
Biophysical forces and biochemical factors play crucial roles in the maintenance of the integrity of articular cartilage. In this study, we explored the effect of dynamic tissue shear deformation and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) on matrix synthesis by chondrocytes within native cartilage explants. Dynamic tissue shear in the range of 0.5-6% strain amplitude at 0.1 Hz was applied to cartilage explants cultured in serum-free medium. Dynamic tissue shear above 1.5% strain amplitude significantly stimulated protein and proteoglycan synthesis, by maximum values of 35 and 25%, respectively, over statically held control specimens. In the absence of tissue shear, IGF-I augmented protein and proteoglycan synthesis up to twofold at IGF-I concentrations in the range of 100-300 ng/ml. When tissue shear and IGF-I stimuli were combined, matrix biosynthesis levels were significantly higher than the maximal effect caused by either stimulus alone. However, there was no significant interaction between tissue shear and IGF-I as determined by two-way ANOVA. We then quantified the effect of dynamic tissue shear on the transport of IGF-I into and within cartilage explants. [125I]IGF-I was added to the medium, and the levels of intratissue [125I]IGF-I were directly measured as a function of time over 48 h in the presence and absence of continuous dynamic shear strain. Dynamic shear did not alter the rate of uptake of [125I]IGF-I into the explants, suggesting that convective diffusion of [125I]IGF-I is negligible under the shear strain conditions used. This is in marked contrast to the enhancement of transport reported in response to uniaxial dynamic compression. Taken together, these data suggest that (1) the stimulatory effect of tissue shear is via mechanotransduction pathways and not by facilitated transport of biochemical factors and (2) chondrocytes may possess complementary signal transduction pathways for biophysical and biochemical factors leading to changes in metabolic activity.  相似文献   

15.
16.
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   

17.
18.
The interaction of the cell with its surrounding extracellular matrix (ECM) has a major effect on cell metabolism. We have previously shown that chondrons, chondrocytes with their in vivo-formed pericellular matrix, can be enzymatically isolated from articular cartilage. To study the effect of the native chondrocyte pericellular matrix on ECM production and assembly, chondrons were compared with chondrocytes isolated without any pericellular matrix. Immediately after isolation from human cartilage, chondrons and chondrocytes were centrifuged into pellets and cultured. Chondron pellets had a greater increase in weight over 8 weeks, were more hyaline appearing, and had more type II collagen deposition and assembly than chondrocyte pellets. Minimal type I procollagen immunofluorescence was detected for both chondron and chondrocyte pellets. Chondron pellets had a 10-fold increase in proteoglycan content compared with a six-fold increase for chondrocyte pellets over 8 weeks (P<0.0001). There was no significant cell division for either chondron or chondrocyte pellets. The majority of cells within both chondron and chondrocyte pellets maintained their polygonal or rounded shape except for a thin, superficial edging of flattened cells. This edging was similar to a perichondrium with abundant type I collagen and fibronectin, and decreased type II collagen and proteoglycan content compared with the remainder of the pellet. This study demonstrates that the native pericellular matrix promotes matrix production and assembly in vitro. Further, the continued matrix production and assembly throughout the 8-week culture period make chondron pellet cultures valuable as a hyaline-like cartilage model in vitro.  相似文献   

19.
Conditions were defined for promoting cell growth, hypertrophy, and extracellular matrix mineralization of a culture system derived from embryonic chick vertebral chondrocytes. Ascorbic acid supplementation by itself led to the hypertrophic phenotype as assessed by respective 10- and 15-fold increases in alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity and type X synthesis. Maximal extracellular matrix mineralization was obtained, however, when cultures were grown in a nutrient-enriched medium supplemented with both ascorbic acid and 20 mM beta-glycerophosphate. Temporal studies over a 3-wk period showed a 3-4-fold increase in DNA accompanied by a nearly constant DNA to protein ratio. In this period, total collagen increased from 3 to 20% of the cell layer protein; total calcium and phosphorus contents increased 15-20-fold. Proteoglycan synthesis was maximal until day 12 but thereafter showed a fourfold decrease. In contrast, total collagen synthesis showed a greater than 10-fold increase until day 18, a result suggesting that collagen synthesis was replacing proteoglycan synthesis during cellular hypertrophy. Separate analysis of individual collagen types demonstrated a low level of type I collagen synthesis throughout the 21-d time course. Collagen types II and X synthesis increased during the first 2 wk of culture; thereafter, collagen type II synthesis decreased while collagen type X synthesis continued to rise. Type IX synthesis remained at undetectable levels throughout the time course. The levels of collagen types I, II, IX, and X mRNA and the large proteoglycan core protein mRNA paralleled their levels of synthesis, data indicating pretranslational control of synthesis. Ultrastructural examination revealed cellular and extracellular morphology similar to that for a developing hypertrophic phenotype in vivo. Chondrocytes in lacunae were surrounded by a well-formed extracellular matrix of randomly distributed collagen type II fibrils (approximately 20-nm diam) and extensive proteoglycan. Numerous vesicular structures could be detected. Cultures mineralized reproducibly and crystals were located in extracellular matrices, principally associated with collagen fibrils. There was no clear evidence of mineral association with extracellular vesicles. The mineral was composed of calcium and phosphorus on electron probe microanalysis and was identified as a very poorly crystalline hydroxyapatite on electron diffraction. In summary, these data suggest that this culture system consists of chondrocytes which undergo differentiation in vitro as assessed by their elevated levels of alkaline phosphatase and type X collagen and their ultrastructural appearance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Synthesis of collagen and proteoglycan by rabbit articular chondrocytes and synovial fibroblasts has been studied over a 12-week period in primary monolayer culture. Chondrocytes, but not fibroblasts, accumulate large quantities of proteoglycan over the culture period studied. Radiolabeling studies with [35S]sulfate have shown that the major proteoglycan synthesized by cultured chondrocytes is similar to the proteoglycan of cartilage matrix. Chondrocytes also synthesize a smaller dermatan sulfate proteoglycan, which is apparently the only proteoglycan species produced by synovial fibroblasts. Collagen synthesis was studied by radiolabeling with [3H]proline. Cultured chondrocytes produce mainly Type II collagen, with lesser amounts of Type I, whereas synovial fibroblasts produce Type I collagen and some low molecular weight collagenous species. Therefore, long-term monolayer culture permits the production of extensive chondroid matrix by chondrocytes, but not fibroblasts.  相似文献   

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