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1.
1. A proteoglycan fraction (the proteoglycan subunit fraction) was prepared from extracts, with 0.15m-KCl (low-ionic-strength) and 0.5m-LaCl(3), 2.0m-CaCl(2) and 4.0m-guanidinium chloride (high-ionic-strength), of bovine nasal cartilage by equilibrium-density-gradient centrifugation, essentially as described by Hascall & Sajdera (1969). 2. The use of different centrifugation times showed that near-equilibrium conditions were reached by 48h for the fractions prepared from the high-ionic-strength extracts. The fraction isolated from the low-ionic-strength extract required a longer centrifugation time to reach equilibrium conditions. 3. The composition of the proteoglycan fractions from the various extracts was compared by analyses of their carbohydrate and amino acid contents. Difference indices were calculated from the amino acid analysis to compare the degree of compositional relationship between the protein components of the proteoglycans. 4. Small compositional differences were found between the proteoglycans isolated from the various high-ionic-strength extracts. The protein content of the fractions from the CaCl(2) extract and the guanidinium chloride extract showed the greatest difference in this respect, although their amino acid analysis was similar. 5. The proteoglycan fraction isolated from the low-ionic-strength extract shows marked differences in composition from the fractions isolated from the high-ionic-strength extracts. Its protein and glucosamine contents were lower whereas its hexuronic acid and galactosamine contents were higher than those of the latter. It also exhibits major differences in its amino acid composition. The glucosamine:galactosamine ratio of the fraction from the low-ionic-strength extract indicates that it may be an almost exclusively chondroitin sulphate-proteoglycan. Its analysis correlates closely with that of a low-molecular-weight proteoglycan isolated from pig laryngeal cartilage by Tsiganos & Muir (1969). 6. The proteoglycan fractions from both the low- and high-ionic-strength extracts migrate as a single band in zone electrophoresis carried out in a sucrose-density gradient at both pH3.0 and pH7.0, although each showed evidence of band widening during the electrophoresis. All the proteoglycan fractions migrated with the same electrophoretic mobility at pH3.0, irrespective of the differences in composition between them. 7. The differences between the proteoglycans from the low- and high-ionic-strength extracts are discussed and the view is advanced that they may be due to association between predominantly chondroitin sulphate-proteoglycans and a keratan sulphate-enriched proteoglycan species.  相似文献   

2.
Analytical electrophoresis on polyacrylamide-agarose gels of aggregating proteoglycan monomers from baboon articular cartilage produces two distinct bands, corresponding to two different aggregating monomer populations. A preparative electrophoresis procedure is described for isolating the two monomers. Proteoglycans were extracted from young baboon articular cartilage in 4 M guanidinium chloride containing proteolysis inhibitors and aggregated after hyaluronic acid addition. The aggregates were separated from non-aggregated proteoglycans by isopycnic centrifugation, followed by gel chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B. The monomers of the aggregates were obtained by isopycnic centrifugation under dissociative conditions. Two monomers were separated by preparative electrophoresis on 0.8 % agarose submerged gels. Approximately 60 % of the proteoglycans were recovered from the gel using a freeze-squeeze procedure. Aliquots of the separated monomers gave single bands when submitted to analytical polyacrylamide-agarose gel electrophoresis. Their migration and appearance were similar to that of the two bands present in the non separated preparation of monomers.  相似文献   

3.
Proteoglycans were extracted, in a yield of about 90%, from costal cartilage of young, growing guinea-pigs. Three solvents were used in sequence: 0.4 M guanidine - HCl, pH 5.8, 4 M guanidine - HCl, pH 5.8, and 4 M guanidine - HCl/0.1 M EDTA, pH 5.8. The proteoglycans were purified and fractionated by cesium chloride density gradient ultracentrifugation under associative and dissociative conditions. Gel chromatography on Sepharose 2 B of proteoglycan fractions from associative centrifugations showed the presence of both aggregated and monomer proteoglycans. The ratio of aggregates to monomers was higher in the second extract than in the other two extracts. Dissociative gradient centrifugation gave a similar distribution for proteoglycans from all three extracts. Thus, with decreasing buoyant density there were decreasing ratios of polysaccharide to protein, and of chondroitin sulfate to keratan sulfate. In addition, there was with decreasing density an increasing ratio of chondroitin 4-sulfate to chondroitin 6-sulfate. Amino acid analyses of dissociative fractions were inaccordance with previously published results. On comparing proteoglycan monomers of the three extracts, significant differences were found. Proteoglycans, extracted at low ionic strength, contained lower proportions of protein, keratan sulfate, chondroitin 6-sulfate and basic amino acids than those of the second extract. The proteoglycans of the third extract also differed from those of the other extracts. The results indicate that the proteoglycans of guinea-pig costal cartilage exist as a very polydisperse and heterogenous population of molecules, exhibiting variations in aggregation capacity, molecular size, composition of protein core, degree of substitution of the protein core, as well as variability in the type of polysaccharides substituted.  相似文献   

4.
Proteoglycans were extracted from 14-day chick embryo brains, which had been labelled in vitro with [35S]sulfate or 3H-labelled amino acids. 4.0 M guanidinium chloride (containing proteinase inhibitors) extracted 94% of the 35S-labelled glycoconjugates. Following cesium chloride equilibrium centrifugation, the proteoglycans in each fraction were characterized by chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B. The most dense fraction (D1), which contained no detectable non-proteoglycan proteins, contained a large, aggregating chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan in addition to small chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate proteoglycans. The less dense fractions (D2-D6) contained both small chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Removal of hyaluronate from the D1 sample by digestion with Streptomyces hyaluronidase in the presence of proteinase inhibitors showed that aggregation of the large chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan is hyaluronate-dependent. Aggregation was restored by re-addition of hyaluronate. Reduction and alkylation, which blocked aggregation of a cartilage A1 proteoglycan, did not interfere with aggregation of the large brain proteoglycan.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Proteoglycans were extracted with 4 M guanidine–HCl from the zone of maturing chondrocytes, the site of endochondral ossification of growing antlers of wapiti (Cervus elaphus). Proteoglycans were isolated by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography and separated by Sepharose CL-4B chromatography into three fractions. Fraction I contained a high molecular mass (>1000 kDa) chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan capable of interacting with hyaluronic acid. Its amino acid composition resembled that of the cartilage proteoglycan, aggrecan. Fraction II contained proteoglycans with intermediate molecular weight which were recognized by monoclonal antibodies specific to chondroitin sulfate and keratan sulfate. Fraction III contained a low molecular mass (<160 kDa) proteoglycan, decorin, with a glucuronate-rich glycosaminoglycan chain.  相似文献   

7.
The agarose-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis procedure for the analysis of proteoglycans originally described by C. A. McDevitt and H. Muir (1971, Anal. Biochem. 44, 612-622) has been modified to minimize trailing and to allow the analysis of crude samples, i.e., tissue extracts. A slab gel system was used, permitting reproducible analysis of many samples. Procedures are described that can be used to separate and quantify several subpopulations of proteoglycans and also to quantify the proportion of proteoglycans capable of aggregating with hyaluronic acid. Applications of the procedure include transfer to nitrocellulose paper followed by immunological detection of proteoglycans as well as fluorography of separated, radiolabeled proteoglycans.  相似文献   

8.
9.
We have developed a procedure for the use of minislab gels to electrophoretically separate proteoglycans (PGs), large macromolecules with molecular masses greater than 2.5 million Da. Our procedure is a modification of the method of C.A. McDevitt and H. Muir (Anal. Biochem. 44, 612-622, 1971) for agarose/polyacrylamide, composite tube gels. These 1% agarose/1.2% acrylamide minigels are run at 35 mA for 75 min; bands are visualized by toluidine blue staining. The subtle size differences between the large aggregating PGs isolated from rat chondrosarcoma, bovine nasal septal cartilage, and adult bovine articular cartilage (which consists of two subpopulations) can be distinguished by their migration on these large pore gels. Chondroitin sulfate chains, added to all wells as a marker of constant mobility, ran immediately behind the dye front. The distance of migration into the gel of PGs incubated overnight with cathepsin B, carboxypeptidase A, papain, plasmin, elastase, or cathepsin G varied with the size of the cleavage products. We propose the use of this procedure for a convenient assessment of cartilage PGs and a rapid, reproducible assay for proteoglycanase activity.  相似文献   

10.
Proteoglycan subunits from human articular cartilage were fractionated by caesium sulphate density gradient centrifugation. A single heterogeneous population of molecules was produced whose average density decreased with increasing age of the individual from which they were obtained. At no density did the carbohydrate composition of any adult fraction resemble that of any newborn fraction, although there was considerable overlap in density. However, there was a similarity in amino acid composition between the most dense proteoglycans from the adult and those of least density from the newborn. The carbohydrate content of a 2-year-old proteoglycan was intermediate in composition, with high density fractions resembling the newborn and low density fractions resembling the adult. In addition, the proteoglycans of lowest density in both the newborn and two year preparations showed additional bands on agarose/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis resembling the adult material. These results indicate that while a core protein of adult composition may occur in the juvenile proteoglycan it need not necessarily be glycosylated in an adult manner, suggesting that glycosylation is to some extent independent of the origin of core protein heterogeneity.  相似文献   

11.
Bovine nasal cartilage was extracted with 0.5 M LaCl3 and the extract then diluted with nine volumes of water. The resulting precipitated (PLaCl3) contained the proteoglycan subunits, together with minor protein components, but was essentially free from hyaluronic acid. The properties of PLaCl3 were investigated by chemical analysis, electrophoresis, viscometry and analytical ultracentrifugation, and the results compared with those for proteoglycan obtained by caesium chloride density gradient centrifugation of 2 M CaCl2 cartilage extracts. Proteoglycan subunits (A1D1) prepared from PLaCl3 showed identical properties to those obtained from other high ionic strength cartilage extracts.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Proteoglycans were extracted from normal human articular cartilage of various ages with 4M-guanidinium chloride and were purified and characterized by using preformed linear CsCl density gradients. With advancing age, there was a decrease in high-density proteoglycans of low protein/uronic acid weight ratio and an increase in the proportion of lower-density proteoglycans, richer in keratan sulphate and protein. Proteoglycans of each age were also shown to disaggregate in 4M-guanidinium chloride and at low pH and to reaggregate in the presence of hyaluronic acid and/or low-density fractions. Osteoarthrotic-cartilage extracts had an increased content of higher-density proteoglycans compared with normal cartilage of the same age, and results also suggested that these were not mechanical or enzymic degradation products, but were possibly proteoglycans of an immature nature.  相似文献   

14.
Electron microscopic immunolocalization and radioimmunoassay have been used to determine the variation with depth of the hyaluronate-binding region of proteoglycan in articular cartilage. The cartilage was cut into serial sections from the articular surface to the bony margin, the proteoglycans were extracted from each section and determined by radioimmunoassay using antibodies raised against proteoglycan binding region. Proteoglycans were found to be most abundant in the middle zone and least abundant near the articular surface. Biochemical analysis for hexuronate in the same extracts showed a distribution of proteoglycan in agreement with these and other published results. The binding region antiserum was used for electron microscopic immunolocalization of proteoglycan with ultrathin sections of cartilage embedded in Lowicryl K4M resin. After digestion of the sections with chondroitinase ABC, the proteoglycans were localized using the antiserum and protein A-coated gold particles as immunolabel. The density of labeling was quantified using a Magiscan image analysis system. Throughout the depth of the cartilage matrix labeling was higher in the pericellular regions compared to the intercellular regions, and variation of the amount of immunolabel with depth was found to show a good correlation with the results from radioimmunoassay. Intracellular labeling of proteoglycans was mainly found over the Golgi region and in membrane-bound (secretory) vesicles.  相似文献   

15.
Proteoglycan aggregates (A1) were prepared from the anulus fibrosus, nucleus pulposus and cartilage-endplate tissues of postnatal (0-6-month-old)-and young-adult (20-30-year-old)-human intervertebral discs. The A1 fractions from young-adult disc contained a greater proportion of non-aggregating proteoglycans than did postnatal tissues. After dissociative CsCl-density-gradient fractionation of the A1, more than 90% of the uronic acid was found in the postnatal A1D1, whereas only 60-80% of the hexuronate was present in the A1D1 isolated from young-adult disc tissues. These results indicated that more lower-buoyant-density proteoglycans occur in the young-adult disc. Link-protein-rich fractions (A1D3) were subjected to SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and immunolocation analyses using monoclonal antibodies specific for epitopes on link protein or proteoglycan. Under non-reducing conditions, the major link protein present in postnatal disc tissues was link protein 1. By contrast, all three link proteins (1, 2 and 3) were detected in young-adult tissues, with the smaller link protein 3 predominating. Analyses of the A1D3 fractions under reducing conditions also indicated the presence of link-protein-degradation peptides (Mr approx. 26,000) from young-adult disc tissues, but not from postnatal tissues. Sequential Sepharose CL-6B and Sephacryl S-300 chromatography in 4 M-guanidinium chloride was employed to separate the link proteins of the A1D3 fraction from protein-rich proteoglycan. Immunolocation analyses indicated that postnatal samples contained no detectable contaminating proteoglycan fragments. However, young-adult link-protein preparations could not be separated from hyaluronic acid-binding region and other proteoglycan fragments by means of these chromatographic procedures. The studies indicate that, compared with hyaline articular cartilage, degraded link protein and proteoglycan accumulate at an early age in young-adult disc tissues. These partially degraded proteoglycan aggregate components may significantly alter the biomechanical properties of disc tissues.  相似文献   

16.
Proteoglycans were extracted from the adult human meniscus under dissociative conditions and purified by CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation. The preparations of highest density contained proteoglycan that possessed the ability to interact with hyaluronic acid, was of large subunit size and was composed of chondroitin sulphate, keratan sulphate and sialic acid-containing oligosaccharides. This 'cartilage-like' proteoglycan also exhibited subunit and aggregate structures analogous to those of hyaline-cartilage proteoglycans when examined by electron microscopy. However, the composition of this proteoglycan was more comparable with proteoglycans from immature cartilage than from age-matched cartilage. The preparations from lower density, which were enriched in dermatan sulphate, contained smaller proteoglycan that was not able to interact with hyaluronic acid. This non-aggregating proteoglycan may be structurally distinct from the 'cartilage-like' proteoglycan, which does not contain dermatan sulphate.  相似文献   

17.
Proteoglycans were isolated from cartilage by extraction with 4M-guanidinium chloride followed by direct centrifugation in 4M-guanidinium chloride/CsCl at a low starting density, 1.34 g/ml. N-Ethylmaleimide was included in the extraction solvent as a precaution against contamination of proteoglycans with unrelated proteins mediated by disulphide exchange. A novel, discrete, low-buoyant-density proteoglycan (1.40--1.35 g/ml) was demonstrated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Its proteoglycan nature was revealed by the shift in the molecular size observed on gel electrophoresis after treatment with chondroitinase ABC. The core protein was monodisperse. The proteoglycan was further purified by gel chromatography with and without addition of hyaluronate. The proteoglycan constitutes less than 2% (by weight) of the total extracted proteoglycans and is not capable of interacting with hyaluronate. The same proteoglycan was purified in larger quantities by sequential associative and dissociative CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation, zonal rate sedimentation in a sucrose gradient and gel chromatography on Sepharose CL-4B. The pure proteoglycan had a molecular weight of 76 300 determined by sedimentation-equilibrium centrifugation and an apparent partial specific volume of 0.59 ml/g. It contained about 25% protein (of dry weight) and had remarkably high contents of leucine and cysteine as compared with other proteoglycans. The proteoglycan contained two to three large chondroitin sulphate chains and some oligosaccharides.  相似文献   

18.
35SO42- - and [3H]-leucine-labelled proteoglycans were isolated from the medium of a fibroblast culture, from an EDTA extract of the monolayer, and from consecutive dithiothreitol and guanidine hydrochloride extracts of the cells. Proteoglycans of different sizes were isolated from the extracts by gel chromatography on Sepharose 4B. In the medium and the EDTA extract the largest proteoglycans contained only 35S-labelled galactosaminoglycan, whereas all other fractions contained in addition heparan [35S-labelled galactosaminoglycan, whereas all other fractions contained in addition heparin [35S]sulphate. The galactosaminoglycan-containing proteoglycans of the various extracts were separated into a larger component, containing chondroitin sulphate-like side chains, and a smaller component, containing dermatan sulphate. The larger proteoglycan of the medium showed reversible association-dissociation behaviour when chromatographed on Sepharose CL2B in phosphate-buffered saline and 4M-guanidine hydrochloride respectively. This property remained after removal of extraneous proteins by CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation in guanidine hydrochloride. The association was markedly increased by the addition of high-molecular-weight hyaluronic acid.  相似文献   

19.
Cartilage from the avian mutant nanomelia has been reported to synthesize cartilage-specific proteoglycans, PGS(SC)-I, at 1-2% of normal values [McKeown & Goetinck (1979) Dev. Biol. 71, 203-215]. Proteoglycans were endogenously labelled with [35S]sulphate and extracted from cartilage in 4 M-guanidine hydrochloride and chromatographed on controlled-pore glass 1400. PGS(SC)-I was obtained from the void volume of these columns. Dissociative sucrose-density-gradient analysis revealed a greater than normal polydispersity in the nanomelic PGS(SC)-I. Fractions from both the controlled-pore glass 1400 void volume and sucrose gradients were tested for their ability to bind specific antibody against cartilage proteoglycan monomer. In all instances, binding of normal fractions was greater than 90%, whereas binding to nanomelic fractions ranged from 20 to 65%. Chromatography of PGS(SC)-I on controlled-pore glass 2500 resulted in 70% of the normal and 25% of the mutant proteoglycans eluting as aggregates. Chondroitin sulphate chains from mutant PGS(SC)-I appeared slightly larger than normal when chromatographed on controlled-pore glass 500. In addition, PGS(SC)-I from nanomelic cartilage is more susceptible to proteolysis in vitro than the PGS(SC)-I from normal cartilage. This evidence suggests that the small amount of cartilage-specific proteoglycan synthesized by nanomelic cartilage is not normal.  相似文献   

20.
Proteoglycan aggregates free of non-aggregating proteoglycan have been prepared from the annuli fibrosi and nuclei pulposi of intervertebral discs of three human lumbar spines by extraction with 4M-guanidinium chloride, associative density gradient centrifugation, and chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B. The aggregate (A1-2B.V0) was subjected to dissociative density-gradient ultracentrifugation. Three proteins of Mr 38 900, 44 200 and 50 100 found in the fraction of low buoyant density (A1-2B.V0-D4) reacted with antibodies to link protein from newborn human articular cartilage. After reduction with mercaptoethanol, two proteins of Mr 43 000 and two of Mr 20 000 and 14 000 were seen. The A1-2B.V0-D4 fraction, labelled with 125I, coeluted with both hyaluronate and a hyaluronate oligosaccharide (HA14) on a Sepharose CL-2B column. HA10 and HA14 reduced the viscosity of A1 fractions; HA4, HA6 and HA8 did not. HA14 decreased the viscosity of disc proteoglycans less than it did that of bovine cartilage proteoglycans. Thus, although a link protein was present in human intervertebral disc, it stabilized proteoglycan aggregates less well than did the link protein from bovine nasal cartilage.  相似文献   

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