首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Cartilage is categorized into three general subgroups, hyaline, elastic, and fibrocartilage, based primarily on morphologic criteria and secondarily on collagen (Types I and II) and elastin content. To more precisely define the different cartilage subtypes, rabbit cartilage isolated from joint, nose, auricle, epiglottis, and meniscus was characterized by immunohistochemical (IHC) localization of elastin and of collagen Types I, II, V, VI, and X, by biochemical analysis of total glycosaminoglycan (GAG) content, and by biomechanical indentation assay. Toluidine blue staining and safranin-O staining were used for morphological assessment of the cartilage subtypes. IHC staining of the cartilage samples showed a characteristic pattern of staining for the collagen antibodies that varied in both location and intensity. Auricular cartilage is discriminated from other subtypes by interterritorial elastin staining and no staining for Type VI collagen. Epiglottal cartilage is characterized by positive elastin staining and intense staining for Type VI collagen. The unique pattern for nasal cartilage is intense staining for Type V collagen and collagen X, whereas articular cartilage is negative for elastin (interterritorially) and only weakly positive for collagen Types V and VI. Meniscal cartilage shows the greatest intensity of staining for Type I collagen, weak staining for collagens V and VI, and no staining with antibody to collagen Type X. Matching cartilage samples were categorized by total GAG content, which showed increasing total GAG content from elastic cartilage (auricle, epiglottis) to fibrocartilage (meniscus) to hyaline cartilage (nose, knee joint). Analysis of aggregate modulus showed nasal and auricular cartilage to have the greatest stiffness, epiglottal and meniscal tissue the lowest, and articular cartilage intermediate. This study illustrates the differences and identifies unique characteristics of the different cartilage subtypes in rabbits. The results provide a baseline of data for generating and evaluating engineered repair cartilage tissue synthesized in vitro or for post-implantation analysis.  相似文献   

2.
The collagen framework of hyaline cartilages, including articular cartilage, consists largely of type II collagen that matures from a cross-linked heteropolymeric fibril template of types II, IX, and XI collagens. In the articular cartilages of adult joints, type III collagen makes an appearance in varying amounts superimposed on the original collagen fibril network. In a study to understand better the structural role of type III collagen in cartilage, we find that type III collagen molecules with unprocessed N-propeptides are present in the extracellular matrix of adult human and bovine articular cartilages as covalently cross-linked polymers extensively cross-linked to type II collagen. Cross-link analyses revealed that telopeptides from both N and C termini of type III collagen were linked in the tissue to helical cross-linking sites in type II collagen. Reciprocally, telopeptides from type II collagen were recovered cross-linked to helical sites in type III collagen. Cross-linked peptides were also identified in which a trifunctional pyridinoline linked both an α1(II) and an α1(III) telopeptide to the α1(III) helix. This can only have arisen from a cross-link between three different collagen molecules, types II and III in register staggered by 4D from another type III molecule. Type III collagen is known to be prominent at sites of healing and repair in skin and other tissues. The present findings emphasize the role of type III collagen, which is synthesized in mature articular cartilage, as a covalent modifier that may add cohesion to a weakened, existing collagen type II fibril network as part of a chondrocyte healing response to matrix damage.  相似文献   

3.
Collagen-free extracts were prepared from bovine, porcine and canine hyaline, elastic and fibrous cartilages, articular capsule, tendon, aorta, cortical bone and regenerating articular surfaces. The extracts were investigated with antisera to bovine nasal septal cartilage, dog articular cartilage and non-collagenous protein fraction of bovine cortical bone. Immunodiffusion, immunoelectrophoresis, and immunohistochemical methods were used. In the different supporting tissues of the three animal species a common antigen, probably of proteoglycan origin, was demonstrated. The finer differences in antigenicity between the different tissues are probably due to the variations in proteoglycan composition of the given supporting tissues. Owing to the wide-spread occurrence of the antigen, the authors suggest the term "species-common connective tissue antigen" instead of the "species-common cartilage antigen" used so far.  相似文献   

4.
Type X collagen is a short chain, non-fibrilforming collagen synthesized primarily by hypertrophic chondrocytes in the growth plate of fetal cartilage. Previously, we have also identified type X collagen in the extracellular matrix of fibrillated, osteoarthritic but not in normal articular cartilage using biochemical and immunohistochemical techniques (von der Mark et al. 1992 a). Here we compare the expression of type X with types I and II collagen in normal and degenerate human articular cartilage by in situ hybridization. Signals for cytoplasmic α1(X) collagen mRNA were not detectable in sections of healthy adult articular cartilage, but few specimens of osteoarthritic articular cartilage showed moderate expression of type X collagen in deep zones, but not in the upper fibrillated zone where type X collagen was detected by immunofluorescence. This apparent discrepancy may be explained by the relatively short phases of type X collagen gene activity in osteoarthritis and the short mRNA half-life compared with the longer half-life of the type X collagen protein. At sites of newly formed osteophytic and repair cartilage, α1(X) mRNA was strongly expressed in hypertrophic cells, marking the areas of endochondral bone formation. As in hypertrophic chondrocytes in the proliferative zone of fetal cartilage, type X collagen expression was also associated with strong type II collagen expression.  相似文献   

5.
The present study was designed to investigate how rat hyaline cartilages at various sites in vivo express the gene and protein of type I collagen using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. The gene of pro alpha 1(I) collagen was expressed by chondrocytes in articular cartilage, and the protein of type I collagen was identified in the cartilage matrix. In contrast, growth plate cartilage expressed the gene of pro alpha 1(I) collagen, but no protein of type I collagen. Neither gene nor protein of type I collagen was expressed in cartilages of trachea and nasal septum. The present study suggested that expression of type I collagen in hyaline cartilages may be regulated tissue-specifically at gene and/or protein levels.  相似文献   

6.
Chondrocytes are surrounded by a narrow pericellular matrix (PCM) that is biochemically, structurally, and biomechanically distinct from the bulk extracellular matrix (ECM) of articular cartilage. While the PCM is often defined by the presence of type VI collagen, other macromolecules such as perlecan, a heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycan, are also exclusively localized to the PCM in normal cartilage and likely contribute to PCM structural integrity and biomechanical properties. Though perlecan is essential for normal cartilage development, its exact role in the PCM is unknown. The objective of this study was to determine the biomechanical role of perlecan in the articular cartilage PCM in situ and its potential as a defining factor of the PCM. To this end, atomic force microscopy (AFM) stiffness mapping was combined with dual immunofluorescence labeling of cryosectioned porcine cartilage samples for type VI collagen and perlecan. While there was no difference in overall PCM mechanical properties between type VI collagen- and perlecan-based definitions of the PCM, within the PCM, interior regions containing both type VI collagen and perlecan exhibited lower elastic moduli than more peripheral regions rich in type VI collagen alone. Enzymatic removal of HS chains from perlecan with heparinase III increased PCM elastic moduli both overall and locally in interior regions rich in both perlecan and type VI collagen. Heparinase III digestion had no effect on ECM elastic moduli. Our findings provide new evidence for perlecan as a defining factor in both the biochemical and biomechanical properties of the PCM.  相似文献   

7.
The distribution of type I, II, III, IV, V and VI collagens in 20 cases of osteosarcoma was demonstrated immunohistochemically using monospecific antibodies to different collagen types. In addition, biochemical analysis was made on collagenous proteins synthesized by tumor cells in short-term cultures obtained from seven representative cases and compared with dermal fibroblasts. In osteoblastic areas, most of the tumor osteoid consisted exclusively of type I collagen. Type V collagen was associated in some of them. Type III and type VI collagens were mainly localized in the perivascular fibrous stroma. Cultured tumor cells from osteoblastic osteosarcomas produced type I collagen exclusively and small amount of type V collagen constantly, while the synthetic activity of type III collagen was extremely low. In contrast, fibroblastic areas were characterized by the codistribution of type I, III, VI collagens and chondroblastic areas by type I, V, VI collagens as well as type II. Furthermore, type IV collagen was demonstrated in the stroma, other than the basement membrane region of blood vessels, in fibroblastic, intramedullary well-differentiated and telangiectatic osteosarcomas. In vitro, the production of variable amounts of type IV collagen, which was not detected in cultured dermal fibroblasts, was also recognized in the osteoblastic, fibroblastic, undifferentiated and intramedullary well-differentiated osteosarcomas examined. These findings suggest that the immunohistochemical approach using monospecific antibodies to different collagen types is useful not only in identifying some specific organoid components, such as tumor osteoid, but also in disclosing the biological properties of osteosarcoma cells with diverse differentiation.  相似文献   

8.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) exerts its action through two types of receptor: high-affinity tyrosine kinase A receptor (trkA) and low-affinity p75 receptor. NGF has a neurotrophic role in central and peripheral nervous system development, but there is also clear evidence of its involvement in the developing skeleton. The aim of the present immunohistochemical study was to investigate the expression and distribution of NGF, trkA, and p75 in normal cartilaginous tissues from adult subjects: articular and meniscal cartilage of the knee, cartilage from the epiglottis, and intervertebral disc tissue. Detection of NGF mRNA was also performed by in situ hybridization. Immunoreaction for NGF and the two receptors in articular chondrocytes, chondrocyte-like cells of meniscus and annulus fibrosus, and chondrocytes of the epiglottis demonstrated that they are all expressed in hyaline, fibrous and elastic cartilaginous tissues, suggesting that they could be involved in cartilage physio-pathology.  相似文献   

9.
The localization of type X collagen and alkaline phosphatase activity was examined in order to gain a better understanding of tissue remodelling during development of human first rib cartilage. First rib cartilages from children and adolescents showed no staining for type X collagen and alkaline phosphatase activity. After onset of mineralization in the late second decade, a peripheral ossification process preceded by mineralized fibrocartilage could be distinguished from a more central one preceded by mineralized hyaline cartilage. No immunostaining for type X collagen was found in either type of cartilage. However, strong staining for alkaline phosphatase activity was detected around chondrocyte-like cells within fibrocartilage adjacent to the peripheral mineralization front, while a weaker staining pattern was observed around chondrocytes of hyaline cartilage near the central mineralization front. In addition, the territorial matrix of some chondrocytes within the hyaline cartilage revealed staining for type I collagen, suggesting that these cells undergo a dedifferentiation process, which leads to a switch from type II to type I collagen synthesis. The study provides evidence that mineralization of the hyaline cartilage areas in human first rib cartilage occurs in the absence of type X collagen synthesis but in the presence of alkaline phosphatase. Thus, mineralization of first rib cartilage seems to follow a different pattern from endochondral ossification in epiphyseal discs.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Normal articular cartilages from the weightbearing areas of the femoral condyles of the knee joints of 11 patients (3–20 years old) and of 35 Schwarzkopf sheep (3 months to 2 years old) were studied using the electron microscope. The study has shown that the matrix of normal articular cartilage is not only composed of collagen fibrils and proteoglycans, but also contains two types of elastic system fibres. Small elastic fibres can be identified in the superficial and lower radiate zones of cartilage of man and sheep. Similar to elastic fibres in other tissues, they consist of a central amorphous core and are surrounded by aggregates of 10 nm microfibrils. Another type of elastic system fibres, oxytalan fibres, are found in the intermediate and upper radiate zones of the articular cartilage.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The extracellular framework and two-thirds of the dry mass of adult articular cartilage are polymeric collagen. Type II collagen is the principal molecular component in mammals, but collagens III, VI, IX, X, XI, XII and XIV all contribute to the mature matrix. In developing cartilage, the core fibrillar network is a cross-linked copolymer of collagens II, IX and XI. The functions of collagens IX and XI in this heteropolymer are not yet fully defined but, evidently, they are critically important since mutations in COLIX and COLXI genes result in chondrodysplasia phenotypes that feature precocious osteoarthritis. Collagens XII and XIV are thought also to be bound to fibril surfaces but not covalently attached. Collagen VI polymerizes into its own type of filamentous network that has multiple adhesion domains for cells and other matrix components. Collagen X is normally restricted to the thin layer of calcified cartilage that interfaces articular cartilage with bone.  相似文献   

13.
The extracellular framework and two-thirds of the dry mass of adult articular cartilage are polymeric collagen. Type II collagen is the principal molecular component in mammals, but collagens III, VI, IX, X, XI, XII and XIV all contribute to the mature matrix. In developing cartilage, the core fibrillar network is a cross-linked copolymer of collagens II, IX and XI. The functions of collagens IX and XI in this heteropolymer are not yet fully defined but, evidently, they are critically important since mutations in COLIX and COLXI genes result in chondrodysplasia phenotypes that feature precocious osteoarthritis. Collagens XII and XIV are thought also to be bound to fibril surfaces but not covalently attached. Collagen VI polymerizes into its own type of filamentous network that has multiple adhesion domains for cells and other matrix components. Collagen X is normally restricted to the thin layer of calcified cartilage that interfaces articular cartilage with bone.  相似文献   

14.
The distinctive tissue localization of collagen types in typical schwannomas with Antoni type A and B areas was demonstrated immunohistochemically using affinity-purified antibodies against types I, III, IV, V and VI collagen and comparative ultrastructural studies were made on the extracellular matrix components. Antoni type A tissue, which was composed of tightly packed spindle cells with long cytoplasmic processes surrounded by a continuous basement membrane and a few fibrillar components of the extracellular matrix, was almost exclusively immunoreactive for type IV collagen, presumably representing the basement membrane. Verocay bodies, which are organoid structures of Antoni type A tissue, had a variety of more abundant extracellular fibrous components, such as banded collagen fibrils, fibrous long-spacing fibrils and microfibrils. These were positive for type I and III, as well as type IV collagen. In Antoni type B areas, where two types to tumor cells designated Schwann cell-like and fibroblast-like were scattered in large amounts of amorphous extracellular matrix containing microfibrils and thick banded collagen fibrils, type VI collagen as well as types I, III and IV collagen were consistently detected. Type V collagen was localized in dense fibrous tissue areas and around blood vessels. These findings indicate that the differently organized cellular patterns of schwannomas, identified as Antoni types A and B, are characterized not only by the ultrastructural features of the extracellular matrix, but also by the distinctive collagen types produced by neoplastic Schwann cells.  相似文献   

15.
Collagen of articular cartilage   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The extracellular framework and two-thirds of the dry mass of adult articular cartilage are polymeric collagen. Type II collagen is the principal molecular component in mammals, but collagens III, VI, IX, X, XI, XII and XIV all contribute to the mature matrix. In developing cartilage, the core fibrillar network is a cross-linked copolymer of collagens II, IX and XI. The functions of collagens IX and XI in this heteropolymer are not yet fully defined but, evidently, they are critically important since mutations in COLIX and COLXI genes result in chondrodysplasia phenotypes that feature precocious osteoarthritis. Collagens XII and XIV are thought also to be bound to fibril surfaces but not covalently attached. Collagen VI polymerizes into its own type of filamentous network that has multiple adhesion domains for cells and other matrix components. Collagen X is normally restricted to the thin layer of calcified cartilage that interfaces articular cartilage with bone.  相似文献   

16.
Confocal microscopy and immuno‐histochemistry were used to examine collagens in the extracellular matrix of cod Gadus morhua swimming muscle. In addition to the well known presence of type I fibrous collagen, types III and VI were also found in the myocommata and the endomysium. The beaded collagen, type VI, was found in the endomysium and the network forming collagen, type IV, was found in the basement membrane. This is the first report of type V collagen in cod muscle and of types II, IV and VI in the muscle of a teleost.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Mammalian Meckel's cartilage undergoes regionally diverse histodifferentiation: the caudal end of Meckel's cartilage extends to the developing ear and gives rise to malleus and incus through endochondral ossification while its major distal region differentiates into sphenomandibular ligament and the anterior ligament of the malleus tympanic plate through fibrous transformation. Since the entire Meckel's cartilage develops up to chondrocyte hypertrophy, the regional extracellular matrix components in the hypertrophic Meckel's cartilage may differ in association with the diverse developmental fates. In this project, the expressions of cartilage collagens were investigated in developing rat Meckel's cartilage and particular interest was given to type X collagen. A cDNA, HP114, encoding the NC1 domain of rat α1(X) collagen was cloned, and a synthetic peptide based on the sequence deduced from HP114 was used to generate a monospecific antibody. In situ hybridization of newborn rat condylar and angular cartilages undergoing endochondral ossification showed restricted labeling with the α1(X) collagen probe in the hypertrophic chondrocyte layer. In contrast, the α1(X) collagen probe totally failed to label the major distal portion of Meckel's cartilage even in the hypertrophic cartilage zone. Immunohistochemistry using the anti-type X collagen monospecific antibody consistently failed to recognize the epitope in the corresponding portion of Meckel's cartilage throughout the experimental periods of gestational Day 17, newborn, and Postnatal Day 7, while the strictly localized positive staining was found in the posterior part of Meckel's cartilage which gave rise to malleus and incus. Since major cartilage collagens type II and type IX were found to be present throughout Meckel's cartilage, we postulate that the regulatory molecular mechanism of type X collagen expression may be closely associated with the developmental fates of fibrous transformation and endochondral ossification in mammalian Meckel's cartilage.  相似文献   

19.
The immunohistochemical localization of types I and II collagen was examined in the following 4 cartilaginous tissues of the rat craniofacial region: the nasal septal cartilage and the spheno-occipital synchondrosis (primary cartilages), and the mandibular condylar cartilage and the cartilage at the intermaxillary suture (secondary cartilages). In both primary cartilages, type II collagen was present in the extracellular matrix (ECM) of the whole cartilaginous area, but type I collagen was completely absent from the ECM. In the secondary cartilages, type I collagen was present throughout the cartilaginous cell layers, and type II collagen was restricted to the ECM of the mature and hypertrophic cell layers. These observations indicate differences in the ECM components between primary and secondary craniofacial cartilages, and that these differences may contribute to their modes of chondrogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号