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1.
Proteoglycans comprise a core protein to which one or more glycosaminoglycan chains are covalently attached. Although a small number of proteins have the capacity to be glycanated and become proteoglycans, it is now realized that these macromolecules have a range of functions, dependent on type and in vivo location, and have important roles in invertebrate and vertebrate development, maintenance, and tissue repair. Many biologically potent small proteins can bind glycosaminoglycan chains as a key part of their function in the extracellular matrix, at the cell surface, and also in some intracellular locations. Therefore, the participation of proteoglycans in disease is receiving increased attention. In this short review, proteoglycan structure, function, and localizations are summarized, with reference to accompanying reviews in this issue as well as other recent literature. Included are some remarks on proteoglycan and glycosaminoglycan localization techniques, with reference to the special physicochemical properties of these complex molecules.  相似文献   

2.
Characterization of proteoglycans from adult bovine tendon   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Proteoglycans were extracted in good yield from the proximal, fibrous portion of adult bovine tendon with 4 m guanidine HCl. They comprise less than 1% of the dry weight of the tissue. Using CsCl density gradient centrifugation, gel chromatography, and ion exchange chromatography, two populations of proteoglycans were separated and purified from other tissue proteins. One was a large, chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan with high buoyant density in CsCl. This component appeared to be composed of two or three subpopulations as detected by agarose/polyacrylamide electrophoresis, although they could not be effectively separated from one another for individual characterization. As a group, the large proteoglycans eluted from Sepharose CL-2B with Kav from 0.1-0.5 and their core protein had Mr greater than 200,000 with high contents of glutamic acid, serine, and glycine. The glycosaminoglycan chains had a weight average Mr of 17,000 and more than 98% of the uronic acid was glucuronic acid. This group comprised only 12% of the total proteoglycan of the tissue. The other 88% of the proteoglycans appeared to represent one group of small molecules that eluted from Sepharose CL-2B at Kav = 0.70. They demonstrated buoyant densities in a CsCl gradient ranging from greater than or equal to 1.51 to 1.30 g/ml. Their core protein had an apparent Mr = 48,000 following removal of the glycosaminoglycan chains by digestion with chondroitinase ABC. This core protein had a particularly high content of aspartic acid/asparagine and leucine. The glycosaminoglycan chains had a weight average Mr of 37,000 and were dermatan sulfate containing 73% iduronic acid. Those molecules found at highest buoyant density appeared to have additional glycosaminoglycan chains that were shorter. Proteoglycans were also extracted from the pressure-bearing distal region of this tendon, where contents of proteoglycan per wet weight of tissue were 3-fold higher and as much as 50% of this was as large as the large proteoglycans from the proximal tissue. Preparations of large proteoglycans from both tendon regions contained molecules capable of interacting with hyaluronic acid.  相似文献   

3.
The ovine endometrium is subjected to cyclic oscillations of estrogen and progesterone in preparation for implantation. One response to fluctuating hormonal levels is the degree of hydration of the tissue, suggesting cyclical alterations in glycosaminoglycan/proteoglycan content. The aim of the present study was to quantitate and characterize glycosaminoglycans in the ovine endometrium during estrogen and progesterone dominant stages. Endogenous endometrial glycosaminoglycan content was determined by chemical analysis and characterized by enzyme specific or chemical degradation. [(35)S]-sulphate and [(3)H]-glucosamine labeled proteoglycans/glycosaminoglycans were extracted by cell lysis or with 4M guanidine-HCl. Extracts were purified by anion exchange and gel chromatography and characterized as above. Estrogen and progesterone dominant endometrium contained 3.2 +/- 0.1 and 2.1 +/- 0.1 mg endogenous glycosaminoglycan/g dehydrated tissue, respectively. Characterization of endogenous glycosaminoglycan showed chondroitin sulphate and hyaluronan contributing over 80%. The major difference between hormonal dominant tissue was a higher estrogenic hyaluronan percentage and a higher progestational keratan sulphate percentage (p < 0.001). Estrogen dominant tissue incorporated 1.6-1.9 fold more radiolabeled proteoglycans/glycosaminoglycans (p < 0.001). Analysis of newly synthesized proteoglycans/glycosaminoglycans revealed a heparan/chondroitin sulphate ratio of 1:2.2-2.5. Keratan sulphate was not detected. Estrogenic hyaluronan was 1.6 fold greater in [(3)H]-labeled tissue. Analysis of labeled proteoglycans/glycosaminoglycans revealed two size classes with apparent molecular weights >2.0 x 10(6) and 0.8-1.1 x 10(5) and a charge class eluting between 0.1-0.5 M NaCl. The greater glycosaminoglycan content (particularly hyaluronan) and synthesis in estrogen dominant tissue supports a role for steroid hormones in endometrial glycosaminoglycan/proteoglycan regulation and consequent tissue hydration. It also suggests a role for these macromolecules in endometrial function and possibly the implantation process.  相似文献   

4.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(6):3137-3145
Transforming growth factors beta 1 and beta 2 bind with high affinity to the core protein of a 250-350-kD cell surface proteoglycan. This proteoglycan (formerly referred to as the type III TGF-beta receptor) coexists in many cells with the receptor implicated in TGF-beta signal transduction (type I TGF-beta receptor), but its function is not known. We report here that soluble TGF-beta-binding proteoglycans are released by several cell types into the culture media, and can be found in serum and extracellular matrices. As has been shown for the membrane-bound form, the soluble proteoglycans have a heterogeneous core protein of 100-120 kD that carries chondroitin sulfate and/or heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains and a small amount of N-linked carbohydrate. The membrane-bound form of this proteoglycan is hydrophobic and associates with liposomes, whereas the soluble forms lack a membrane anchor and do not associate with liposomes. Differences in the electrophoretic migration of the soluble and membrane forms of this proteoglycan suggest additional structural differences in their core proteins and glycosaminoglycan chains. These soluble and membrane-bound proteoglycans, for which we propose the name "betaglycans," might play distinct roles in pericellular retention, delivery, or clearance of activated TGF-beta.  相似文献   

5.
The murine embryonal carcinoma derived cell line M1536-B3 secretes the basement membrane components laminin and entactin and, when grown in bacteriological dishes, produces and adheres to sacs of basement membrane components. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans have been isolated from these sacs, the cells, and the medium. At least three different heparan sulfate proteoglycans are produced by these cells as determined by proteoglycan size, glycosaminoglycan chain length, and charge density. The positions of the N- and O-sulfate groups in the glycosaminoglycan chains from each proteoglycan appear to be essentially the same despite differences in the size and culture compartment locations of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Additionally, small quantities of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans are found in each fraction and copurify with each heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Because this cell line appears to synthesize at least three different heparan sulfate proteoglycans which are targeted to different final locations (basement membrane, cell surface, and medium), this will be a useful system in which to study the factors which determine final heparan sulfate proteoglycan structures and culture compartment targeting and the possible effects of the protein core(s) on heparan sulfate carbohydrate chain synthesis and secretion.  相似文献   

6.
Proteoglycans of Wharton's jelly contain mainly chondroitin/dermatan sulphate chains. The predominant proteoglycan is decorin (core proteins of 45 and 47 kDa), although the core proteins of biglycan (45 kDa), versican (260 kDa) and of other proteoglycans (90, 110, 220 kDa) were also detected (Gogiel et al., 2003). The aim of the present study was to compare the proteoglycan composition of Wharton's jelly of newborns delivered by healthy mothers and those with pre-eclampsia. Proteoglycans from pre-eclamptic Wharton's jelly had a higher sulphated glycosaminoglycan/protein ratio than those of normal tissue. Pre-eclampsia is associated with a lower level of all proteoglycan core proteins, especially those of higher molecular mass (such as versican), although the same set of core proteins were found in normal and pre-eclamptic Wharton's jelly. The alterations in the proteoglycan composition of Wharton's jelly may affect the mechanical properties of the umbilical cord and, in the case of pre-eclampsia, disturb foetal blood circulation.  相似文献   

7.
Heparan sulphate and chondroitin/dermatan sulphate proteoglycans of human skin fibroblasts were isolated and separated after metabolic labelling for 48 h with 35SO4(2-) and/or [3H]leucine. The proteoglycans were obtained from the culture medium, from a detergent extract of the cells and from the remaining ''matrix'', and purified by using density-gradient centrifugation, gel and ion-exchange chromatography. The core proteins of the various proteoglycans were identified by electrophoresis in SDS after enzymic removal of the glycosaminoglycan side chains. Skin fibroblasts produce a number of heparan sulphate proteoglycans, with core proteins of apparent molecular masses 350, 250, 130, 90, 70, 45 and possibly 35 kDa. The major proteoglycan is that with the largest core, and it is principally located in the matrix. A novel proteoglycan with a 250 kDa core is almost entirely secreted or shed into the culture medium. Two exclusively cell-associated proteoglycans with 90 kDa core proteins, one with heparan sulphate and another novel one with chondroitin/dermatan sulphate, were also identified. The heparan sulphate proteoglycan with the 70 kDa core was found both in the cell layer and in the medium. In a previous study [Fransson, Carlstedt, Cöster & Malmström (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 5657-5661] it was suggested that skin fibroblasts produce a proteoglycan form of the transferrin receptor. However, the core protein of the major heparan sulphate proteoglycan now purified does not resemble this receptor, nor does it bind transferrin. The principal secreted proteoglycans are the previously described large chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan (PG-L) and the small dermatan sulphate proteoglycans (PG-S1 and PG-S2).  相似文献   

8.
While it has been long appreciated that sugar-modified proteins coat the cell surface, their functions are poorly understood. Here, I describe recent genetic studies that demonstrate that one class of sugar-modified proteins, cell-surface proteoglycans, play crucial roles in morphogenesis, growth regulation and tumor suppression. Mutations that affect individual proteoglycans or the enzymes required for glycosaminoglycan synthesis regulate Wingless and Decapentaplegic signaling in Drosophila, and body size in mice and humans. Compromising proteoglycan function is also associated with the development of Wilm's tumors and hereditary multiple exostoses. In this review, these biological findings are placed in the context of proteoglycan biochemistry and molecular function.  相似文献   

9.
Connective tissue proteoglycans undergo interaction with poly(L -arginine) when mixed in dilute neutral aqueous solution. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicates that the polypeptide adopts the α-helical conformation rather than the extended coil form normally observed at neutral pH. The interactions of a series of proteoglycans with different protein and glycosaminoglycan contents have been compared. The arginine/disaccharide residue ratio at maximum interaction appears to be constant with varying protein content of the proteoglycans that contain chondroitin 4-sulfate. The thermal stability of the proteoglycan interaction is the same as for the component polysaccharide. Thus in terms of the strength of interaction with homopolypeptides, the properties of proteoglycan and the component glycosaminoglycans are the same, and this is likely also to be the case for collagen–proteoglycan systems. The interactions of keratan sulfate-2 have also been investigated. These are similar but have much lower thermal stability than corneal keratan sulfate-1. The results are consistent with the weak interaction of the keratan sulfate-2 component of bovine nasal septum proteoglycan.  相似文献   

10.
The metabolism of cell-associated proteoglycans, labeled in the glycosaminoglycan portion with 35SO2-4, was studied in normal skin fibroblasts (SL66 cells), NH4Cl-treated SL66 fibroblasts, and in I-cells derived from patients with mucolipidosis II. Kinetic data from label-chase experiments and gel filtration analysis of the molecular weight distribution of the radiolabeled glycosaminoglycans indicated that I-cells and NH4Cl-treated normal fibroblasts (a) internalize cell surface proteoglycans, (b) remove glycosaminoglycan chains from proteoglycan core proteins, and (c) degrade heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains via an endoglycosidic activity. These processes occur with rates comparable to those in normal fibroblasts. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the glycosaminoglycan chains of cell-surface proteoglycans are separated from the protein cores in a nonlysosomal compartment prior to the transport of these chains to lysosomes for degradation. These observations also raise the possibility that this early step in separation of glycosaminoglycan chains from protein cores may serve to regulate the levels of glycosaminoglycan-free core protein observed in various cells.  相似文献   

11.
Endothelial-derived proteoglycans are important regulators of the coagulation-pathway in vivo and our primary objective of this study was to determine whether chronic shear stress affected the synthesis, release, and activity of proteoglycans from bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAEC). BAEC were cultured under shear and proteoglycans were purified from BAEC conditioned media and analyzed using both anionic exchange and size exclusion chromatography. The overall amount of proteoglycans produced per cell was significantly greater for the high shear-treated samples compared to the low shear-treated samples indicating that the shear magnitude did impact cell responsiveness. While overall size and composition of the proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) side chains were not altered by shear, the relative proportion of the high and low molecular weight species was inversely related to shear and differed significantly from that found under static tissue culture conditions. Moreover, a unique proteoglycan peak was identified from low shear stress (5 +/- 2 dynes/cm(2)) conditioned media when compared to high shear conditions (23 +/- 8 dynes/cm(2)) via anionic exchange chromatography, suggesting that subtle changes in the GAG structures may impact activity of these molecules. In order to characterize whether these changes impacted proteoglycan function, we studied the effects of shear specific proteoglycans on the inhibition of thrombin-induced human platelet aggregation as well as on platelet-fibrin clot dynamics. Proteoglycans from high shear-treated samples were less effective inhibitors of both platelet aggregation and blood coagulation inhibition than proteoglycans from low shear-treated samples and both were less effective than proteoglycans isolated from static tissue culture samples. However, due to changes in the overall proteoglycan synthesis and release rate, the high and low shear-treated sample had essentially identical effects on these activities, suggesting that the cells were able to compensate for stress-induced proteoglycan changes. Our data suggests that shear stress, by altering proteoglycan synthesis and fine structure, may play a role in maintaining vascular hemodynamics and hemostasis.  相似文献   

12.
Fibroblast cultures were initiated from two distinct regions of the adult bovine deep flexor tendon and synthesis of 35S-labeled proteoglycans by these cultures was investigated. The proximal/tensional region of the tendon was composed of linearly arranged dense collagen bundles, and its glycosaminoglycan hexosamine content was only 0.2% of the dry weight of the tissue. The proteoglycans of this region were predominantly small (Kav = 0.5 on Sepharose CL-4B). Cells placed into culture from this region attached to the substratum readily, and the radiolabeled proteoglycans from these cultures were 90% small proteoglycans. In a more distal region of the tendon that is subjected to compressive forces, the collagen was arranged as a network of fibrils separated from each other by a matrix that stained intensely with Alcian blue. The glycosaminoglycan content of this compressed region was up to 5-fold higher than in the proximal region, and as much as 50% of the proteoglycans were large molecules (eluted from Sepharose CL-4B in the Vo). Cells placed into culture from the distal/compressed region did not attach to the substratum as readily as those from the proximal region and were characterized by the presence of numerous cytoplasmic lipid inclusions. The [35S]proteoglycans synthesized by the distal tendon fibroblast cultures were divided into two approximately equal populations of large and small proteoglycans having elution characteristics similar to the proteoglycans extracted from this tissue. The distinct profiles of proteoglycan production were maintained by the cells in culture for several weeks, although eventually the amount of large proteoglycan synthesized by the distal tendon fibroblast cultures diminished. Both regions of tendon contained predominantly type I collagen, and collagen production was about 10% of the total protein synthesized by both cell cultures. These observations indicate that adult tendon fibroblasts in culture express stable synthesis of proteoglycan populations similar to those found in the region of tendon from which they were derived.  相似文献   

13.
Skin undergoes dramatic age-related changes in its mechanical properties, including changes in tissue hydration and resiliency. Proteoglycans are macromolecular conjugates of protein and carbohydrate (glycosaminoglycan) which are involved in these tissue properties. In order to examine whether age-related changes in skin proteoglycans may contribute to the age-related changes in the mechanical properties of skin, proteoglycans from human skin of various ages were extracted and analyzed. Samples were obtained from two different fetal ages, from mature skin, and from senescent skin. As a function of age, there is a decrease in the proportion of large chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (versican) and a concomitant increase in the proportion of small dermatan sulfate proteoglycans (decorin). Based on reactivity with antibodies to various chondroitin sulfate epitopes, fetal versican differs from the versican found in older skin with respect to the chondroitin sulfate chains. Also, the decorin of fetal skin is slightly larger, while the decorin of older skin shows greater polydispersity in both its size and its charge to mass ratio. There are also age-related differences in the size and polydispersity of the core proteins of decorin. The most pronounced change in skin proteoglycans is the appearance in mature skin of a proteoglycan which is smaller than decorin, but which has the same amino terminal amino acid sequence as decorin. This small proteoglycan is abundant in mature skin and may be a catabolic fragment of decorin or an alternatively spliced form of decorin. In light of the known ability of decorin to influence collagen fibrillogenesis and fibril diameter, the appearance of this small decorin-related proteoglycan may have a significant effect on skin elasticity. The observation that proteoglycans in skin show dramatic age-related differences suggests that these changes may be involved in the age-related changes in the physical properties of skin.  相似文献   

14.
Proteoglycans contain a unique carbohydrate component, glycosaminoglycan, which consists of repeating, typically sulfated disaccharides, and is capable of interacting with diverse molecules. Specific, clustered arrangements of sulfate on the glycosaminoglycan backbone form binding sites for many biologically important ligands such as extracellular matrix molecules and growth factors. Core proteins of proteoglycans also show molecular interactions necessary for organizing scaffolds in the extracellular matrix or for anchoring proteoglycans to the plasma membrane. Experimental protocols aiming at extracting maximal amounts of proteoglycans from tissues or cells require disruption of molecular interactions involving proteoglycans by denaturing solvents. Among many of the proteoglycan separation procedures, anion exchange chromatography, which takes advantage of the presence of highly negatively charged glycosaminoglycans in all proteoglycans, serves one of the most convenient general separation techniques.  相似文献   

15.
Monoclonal antibodies have been raised against determinants present in cartilage proteoglycan. Characterization of the specificity of these antibodies indicated that they recognize determinants present in the keratan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chain and on chondroitin sulfate oligosaccharide stubs attached to the proteoglycan core protein after chondroitinase digestion of the proteoglycan (i.e., delta-unsaturated 4- and 6-sulfated and unsulfated chondroitin sulfate on the proteoglycan core). The antibody recognizing keratan sulfate has been used to demonstrate the presence of a keratan sulfate-rich proteoglycan subpopulation that increases with increasing age of animal compared with chondroitin sulfate-rich proteoglycans. Monoclonal antibodies recognizing determinants on chondroitinase-treated proteoglycan have been used in immunohistochemical localization studies determining the differential distribution of 4- and 6-sulfated and unsulfated proteoglycans in tissue sections of cartilage and other noncartilaginous tissues. Digestion with chondroitinase ABC or ACII can be used to differentiate between chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate proteoglycan in different connective tissues. In addition, the presence of a 6-sulfated chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan that is associated with membranes surrounding nerve and muscle fiber bundles is described. Monoclonal antibodies were also raised against the link protein(s) of cartilage proteoglycan aggregate. They have been used in peptide map analyses of link protein and in demonstrating the presence of a high-mannose oligosaccharide chain of the link proteins. The presence of high-mannose oligosaccharide structures on the link protein(s) accounts for the microheterogeneity of the link proteins (link proteins 1, 2, or 3) that is observed on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels.  相似文献   

16.
The characteristics of cell-associated proteoglycans were studied and compared with those from the medium in suspension cultures of calf articular-cartilage chondrocytes. By including hyaluronic acid or proteoglycan in the medium during [35S]sulphate labelling the proportion of cell-surface-associated proteoglycans could be decreased from 34% to about 15% of all incorporated label. A pulse-chase experiment indicated that this decrease was probably due to blocking of the reassociation with the cells of proteoglycans exported to the medium. Three peaks of [35S]sulphate-labelled proteoglycans from cell extracts and two from the medium were isolated by gel chromatography on Sephacryl S-500. These were characterized by agarose/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of core proteins, by glycosaminoglycan composition and chain size as well as by distribution of glycosaminoglycans in proteolytic fragments. The results showed that associated with the cells were (a) large proteoglycans, typical for cartilage, apparently bound to hyaluronic acid at the cell surface, (b) an intermediate-size proteoglycan with chondroitin sulphate side chains (this proteoglycan, which had a large core protein, was only found associated with the cells and is apparently not related to the large proteoglycans), (c) a small proteoglycan with dermatan sulphate side chains with a low degree of epimerization, and (d) a somewhat smaller proteoglycan containing heparan sulphate side chains. The medium contained a large aggregating proteoglycan of similar nature to the large cell-associated proteoglycan and small proteoglycans with dermatan sulphate side chains with a higher degree of epimerization than those of the cells, i.e. containing some 20% iduronic acid.  相似文献   

17.
When slices of adult rabbit articular cartilage were incubated in culture medium, the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate or [3H]acetate into glycosaminoglycans increased 4-8 fold during the first 5 days of incubation. Similar changes in biosynthetic activity were observed during culture of adult bovine cartilage. The activation of synthesis was not serum-dependent, but appeared to be a result of the depletion of tissue proteoglycan that occurs under these incubation conditions [Sandy, Brown & Lowther (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 543, 536--544]. Thus, although complete activation was observed in serum-free medium, it was not observed if the cartilage was cultured inside dialysis tubing or in medium containing added proteoglycan subunit. The average molecular size of the proteoglycans synthesized by activated tissue was slightly larger than normal, as determined by chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B, and the average molecular size of the glycosaminoglycans synthesized by activated tissue was markedly increased over the normal. The increase in chain size was accompanied by an increase in the proportion of the chains degraded by chondroitinase ABC; these results are consistent with the preferential synthesis by activated chondrocytes of chondroitin sulphate-rich proteoglycans. The increase in glycosaminoglycan chain size was observed whether the chains were formed on endogenous core protein or on exogenous benzyl-beta-D-zyloside. An approximate 4-fold activation in culture of glycosaminoglycan synthesis on protein core was accompanied by a 1.54-fold increase in the rate of incorporation of [3H]serine into the chondroitin sulphate-linkage region of the proteoglycans. A 2.8-fold activation in culture of glycosaminoglycan synthesis on benzyl-beta-D-zyloside was accompanied by a 1.7-fold increase in the rate of incorporation of [3H]benzyl-beta-D-zyloside into glycosaminoglycans. The activation of glycosaminoglycan synthesis was, however, accompanied by no detectable change in the activity of xylosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.26) in cell-free extracts. These results are discussed in relation to current ideas on the control of proteoglycan synthesis in cartilage.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans are complex molecules composed of a core protein with covalently attached glycosaminoglycan chains. While the protein part determines localization of the proteoglycan on the cell surfaces or in the extracellular matrix, the glycosaminoglycan component, heparan sulfate, mediates interactions with a variety of extracellular ligands such as growth factors and adhesion molecules. Through these interactions, heparan sulfate proteoglycans participate in many events during cell adhesion, migration, proliferation and differentiation. We are determining the multitude of proteoglycan functions, as their intricate roles in many pathways are revealed. They act as coreceptors for growth factors, participate in signalling during cell adhesion, modulate the activity of a broad range of molecules, and partake in many developmental and pathological processes, including tumorigenesis and wound repair. This review concentrates on biological roles of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans, namely syndecans and glypicans, and outlines the progress achieved during the last decade in unraveling the molecular interactions behind proteoglycan functions.  相似文献   

20.
In the proteoglycans extracted from rabbit costal chondrocytes in culture, two populations of proteoglycans were distinguished by density gradient centrifugation under dissociative conditions. The major component was the faster sedimenting population (proteoglycan I), the putative 'cartilage-specific' proteoglycans, and the minor component was the slower sedimenting population (proteoglycan II). The monomeric size of proteoglycan I was closely related to the differentiation-state of chondrocytes and was a good marker of the differentiated chondrocytes. Treatment of the cultures with parathyroid hormone (PTH) induced an increase in the monomeric size of proteoglycan I. This increase was ascribed to an increase in the molecular size of the glycosaminoglycan chain in proteoglycan I. On the other hand, somatomedin-like growth factors, such as multiplication-stimulating activity (MSA) and cartilage-derived factor (CDF), did not affect the size of proteoglycan I, while they markedly stimulated the synthesis of proteoglycan I. In contrast, treatment with nonsomatomedin growth factors, such as fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF), resulted in not only a decrease in glycosaminoglycan synthesis but also a slight decrease in size of proteoglycan I. However, synthesis and size of proteoglycan II were little affected by these agents. Thus, the present study clearly shows that PTH and somatomedin-like growth factors have differential functions in bringing about the expression of the differentiated phenotype of chondrocytes: PTH influences chain elongation and termination of glycosaminoglycans in proteoglycan I, while somatomedin-like growth factors affect primarily the synthesis and secretion of proteoglycan I.  相似文献   

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