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1.
The transition of type I and type II collagens during cartilage and bone development in the chick embryo was studied by immunofluorescence using antibodies against type I or type II collagens. Type II collagen was found in all cartilaginous structures which showed metachromatic staining. Type I collagen appeared in the perichondrium of the tibia at stage 28 and was also found in osteoid, periosteal and enchondral bone after decalcification, periosteum, and tendons, ligaments, and capsules.Using the immunohistological method it was possible to identify specific collagen types in areas undergoing rapid proliferation and collagen transition, such as diaphyseal and epiphyseal perichondrium, or in enchondral osteogenesis. During enchondral ossification type I collagen is deposited onto the eroded surface of cartilage. It partially diffuses into the cartilage matrix forming a “hybrid” collagen matrix with type II collagen, which is a site for subsequent ossification. During appositional growth of diaphyseal cartilage and differentiation of epiphyseal perichondrium into articular cartilage, perichondral cells switch from type I to type II collagen synthesis when differentiating into chondroblasts. In the transition zones, chondroblasts are imbedded in a “hybrid” matrix consisting of a mixture of type I and type II collagens.  相似文献   

2.
This work describes an approach to monitor chondrogenesis of stage-24 chick limb mesodermal cells in vitro by analyzing the onset of type II collagen synthesis with carboxymethyl-cellulose chromatography, immunofluorescence, and radioimmunoassay. This procedure allowed specific and quantitative determination of chondrocytes in the presence of fibroblasts and myoblasts, both of which synthesize type I collagen. Chondrogenesis was studied in high-density cell preparations on tissue culture plastic dishes and on agar base. It was found that stage-24 limb mesenchymal cells initially synthesized only type I collagen. With the onset of chondrogenesis, a gradual transition to type II collagen synthesis was observed. In cell aggregates formed over agar, type II collagen synthesis started after 1 day in culture and reached levels of 80-90 percent of the total collagen synthesis at 6-8 days. At that time, the cells in the center of the aggregates had acquired the typical chondrocyte phenotype and stained only with type II collagen antibodies, whereas the peripheral cells had developed into a "perichondrium" and stained with type I and type II collagen antibodies. On plastic dishes plated with 5 X 10(6) cells per 35mm dish, cartilage nodules developed after 4-6 days, but the type II collagen synthesis only reached levels of 10-20 percent of the total collagen. The majority of the cells differentiated into fibroblasts and myoblasts and synthesized type I collagen. These studies demonstrate that analysis of cell specific types of collagen provides a useful method for detailing the specific events in the differentiation of mesenchymal cells in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
Transverse frozen sections from the postcephalic region of stage 9-16 chick embryos and from the wing bud region of stage 17-31 embryos were stained with antibodies to the major extracellular matrix components of cartilage. These probes included unfractionated A1 and A2 antisera to the major cartilage proteoglycan, affinity-purified purified antibodies to the proteoglycan core protein and to Type II collagen, and a monoclonal antibody to keratan sulfate. In embryos as early as stage 10, notochord stained specifically with the keratan sulfate monoclonal antibody. At this stage the notochord, as well as surrounding tissues, were negative to cartilage proteoglycan and collagen antibodies. Positive staining with the latter probes was coordinately acquired by notochord cells and their accompanying sheath around stage 15, while surrounding tissues remained negative. At this stage, the ventral region of the perispinal cord sheath exhibited light staining with the proteoglycan and keratan sulfate antibodies though failing to react to Type II collagen antibodies. Positive staining of notochord and ventral spinal cord persisted through later developmental stages. As revealed by immunofluorescence, definitive vertebral chondroblasts first emerged at approximately stage 23 and definitive limb chondroblasts at stage 25. The results are discussed in terms of the possible multiple roles of notochord in early embryogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
Synthesis of collagen types I, II, III, and IV in cells from the embryonic chick cornea was studied using specific antibodies and immunofluorescence. Synthesis of radioactively labeled collagen types I and III was followed by fluorographic detection of cyanogen bromide peptides on polyacrylamide slab gels and by carboxymethylcellulose chromatography followed by disc gel electrophoresis. Type III collagen had been detected previously by indirect immunofluorescence in the corneal epithelial cells at Hamburger-Hamilton stages 20--30 but not in the stroma at any age. Intact corneas from embryos older than stage 30 contain and synthesize type I collagen but no detectable type III collagen. However, whole stromata subjected to collagenase treatment and scraping (to remove epithelium and endothelium) and stromal fibroblasts from such corneas inoculated in vitro begin synthesis of type III collagen within a few hours while continuing to synthesize type I collagen. As demonstrated by double-antibody staining, most corneal fibroblasts contain collagen types I and III simultaneously. Collagen type III was identified biochemically in cell layers and media after chromatography on carboxymethylcellulose be detection of disulfide-linked alpha l (III)3 by SDS gel electrophoresis. The conditions under which the corneal fibroblasts gain the ability to synthesize type III collagen are the same as those under which they lose the ability to synthesize the specific proteoglycan of the cornea: the presence of corneal-type keratan sulfate.  相似文献   

5.
The appearance and distribution of type I, II, and III collagens in the developing chick eye were studied by specific antibodies and indirect immunofluorescence. At stage 19, only type I collagen was detected in the primary corneal stroma, in the vitreous body, and along the lens surface. At later stages, type I collagen was located in the primary and secondary corneal stroma and in the fibrous sclera, but not around the lens. Type II collagen was first observed at stage 20 in the primary corneal stroma, neural retina, and vitreous body. It was particularly prominent at the interface of the neural retina and vitreous body and, from stage 30 on, in the cartilaginous sclera. The primary corneal stroma consisted of a mixture of type I and II collagens between stages 20 and 27. Invasion of the primary corneal stroma by mesenchyme and subsequent deposition of fibroblast-derived collagen corresponded with a pronounced increase of type I collagen, throughout the entire stroma, and of type II collagen, in the subepithelial region. Type II collagen was also found in Bowman's and Descemet's membranes. A transient appearance of type III collagen was observed in the corneal epithelial cells, but not in the stroma (stages 20–30). The fully developed cornea contained both type I and II collagens, but no type III collagen. Type III collagen was prominent in the fibrous sclera, iris, nictitating membrane, and eyelids.  相似文献   

6.
We have employed a highly specific in situ hybridization protocol that allows differential detection of mRNAs of collagen types I and II in paraffin sections from chick embryo tissues. All probes were cDNA restriction fragments encoding portions of the C-propeptide region of the pro alpha-chain, and some of the fragments also encoded the 3'-untranslated region of mRNAs of either type I or type II collagen. Smears of tendon fibroblasts and those of sternal chondrocytes from 17-d-old chick embryos as well as paraffin sections of 10-d-old whole embryos and of the cornea of 6.5-d-old embryos were hybridized with 3H-labeled probes for either type I or type II collagen mRNA. Autoradiographs revealed that the labeling was prominent in tendon fibroblasts with the type I collagen probe and in sternal chondrocytes with the type II collagen probe; that in the cartilage of sclera and limbs from 10-d-old embryos, the type I probe showed strong labeling of fibroblast sheets surrounding the cartilage and of a few chondrocytes in the cartilage, whereas the type II probe labeled chondrocytes intensely and only a few fibroblasts; and that in the cornea of 6.5-d-old embryos, the type I probe labeled the epithelial cells and fibroblasts in the stroma heavily, and the endothelial cells slightly, whereas the type II probe labeled almost exclusively the epithelial cells except for a slight labeling in the endothelial cells. These data indicate that embryonic tissues express these two collagen genes separately and/or simultaneously and offer new approaches to the study of the cellular regulation of extracellular matrix components.  相似文献   

7.
Type II collagen is a major component of cartilage extracellular matrix. Differentiation of mesenchyme into cartilage involves the cessation of type I collagen synthesis and the onset of type II collagen synthesis. Solution hybridization of mRNA isolated from chick limb buds with a cDNA probe to type II collagen mRNA showed the presence of small amounts of type II collagen message in mesenchymal chick limbs. We have examined the localization of type II collagen mRNA in mesenchymal chick wing buds by in situ hybridization using single stranded RNA probes. Our results show a small but detectable amount of type II collagen RNA distributed uniformly in early limbs until the first precartilage condensations form at stage 22. This is interesting because it is known that mesenchyme isolated from chick wing buds has the capacity to undergo chondrogenesis in culture, even if taken from nonchondrogenic areas of the limb. At stage 23, type II collagen mRNA is found at significantly increased levels in the cells of the precartilage condensation when compared to the other limb cells. As chondrogenesis proceeds, the amount of type II collagen RNA increases even more in cells of the cartilage elements. The signal in the peripheral tissue is indistinguishable from background. These results show that type II collagen message exists at low levels in cells throughout the mesenchymal chick wing bud, until the formation of the condensation results in an elevation of type II mRNA in the prechondrogenic cells found in the core of the limb.  相似文献   

8.
Expression of specific differentiation markers was investigated by histochemistry, immunofluorescence, and biosynthetic studies in osteoblasts outgrown from chips derived from tibia diaphyses of 18-day-old chick embryos. The starting osteoblast population expressed type I collagen and alkaline phosphatase in addition to other bone and cartilage markers as the lipocalin Ch21; the extracellular matrix deposited by these cells was not stainable for cartilage proteoglycans, and mineralization was observed when the culture was maintained in the presence of ascorbic acid, calcium and beta-glycerophosphate. During culture, clones of cells presenting a polygonal chondrocyte morphology and surrounded by an Alcian-positive matrix appeared in the cell population. Type II collagen and type X collagen were synthesized in these areas of chondrogenesis. In addition, chondrocytes isolated from these cultures expressed Ch21 and alkaline phosphatase. Chondrocytes were generated also from homogeneous osteoblast populations derived from a single cloned cell. The coexistence of chondrocytes and osteoblasts was observed during amplification of primary clones as well as in subclones. The data show the existence, within embryonic bone, of cells capable in vitro of both osteogenic and chondrogenic differentiation.  相似文献   

9.
Cartilage contains mixed fibrils of collagen types II, IX, and XI   总被引:31,自引:7,他引:24       下载免费PDF全文
The distribution of collagen XI in fibril fragments from 17-d chick embryo sternal cartilage was determined by immunoelectron microscopy using specific polyclonal antibodies. The protein was distributed throughout the fibril fragments but was antigenically masked due to the tight packing of collagen molecules and could be identified only at sites where the fibril structure was partially disrupted. Collagens II and IX were also distributed uniformly along fibrils but, in contrast to collagen XI, were accessible to the antibodies in intact fibrils. Therefore, cartilage fibrils are heterotypically assembled from collagens II, IX, and XI. This implies that collagen XI is an integral component of the cartilage fibrillar network and homogeneously distributed throughout the tissue. This was confirmed by immunofluorescence.  相似文献   

10.
Embryonic chick articular and keel cartilage was found to synthesize two types of collagen. The amount of Type I collagen synthesis decreased from 60% to nearly 10% during the embryonic period studied, thus suggesting not only coexistence of both collagen types in the same tissue, but also a developmental transformation from predominantly Type I synthesis to Type II synthesis with cartilage development and maturation. Radioautographs suggested that all chondrocytes were equally active in collagen synthesis and failed to show any significant non-cartilagenous tissue contamination. Therefore variation in collagen type synthesis must be a product of some unknown genetic regulatory mechanism within the cartilage tissue.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Type II collagen is a major component of hyaline cartilage but recent studies have demonstrated the presence of this protein in a variety of interfaces that separate epithelia from mesenchyme, particularly in early stages of embryonic chick development. In the present study an immunohistochemical analysis of the distribution of type II collagen was performed on closely staged wing buds of early chick embryo. This report describes how using two different monoclonal antibodies against type II collagen and the peroxidase or fluorescence staining technique reveals that deposition of type II collagen at the ectoderm-mesenchyme interface occurs in the proximal part of the limb coincidentally with the appearance of this protein in the proximal core region, where chondrogenesis begins (stage 25). Then the staining in the subepithelial region spreads distallly with time, following the progression of the formation of cartilage rudiments. At about 7 days of development type II collagen is present under the apical ectoderm ridge and surrounds completely the wing bud underneath the epithelium. At the same time, another antibody directed against the cartilage-specific proteoglycan core protein only stains the chondrogenic central core of the limb and not the subepithelium. Although type II collagen and cartilage-specific proteoglycan are closely associated in the cartilage, the observations presented here suggest that the deposition of these proteins can be regulated independently during limb formation. The role of type II collagen at the epithelium-mesenchyme interface during limb formation is still to be determined.  相似文献   

12.
Type II collagen is a major component of hyaline cartilage, and has been suggested to be causally involved in promoting chondrogenesis during embryonic development. In the present study we have performed an immunohistochemical analysis of the distribution of type II collagen during several early stages of embryonic chick development. Unexpectedly, we have found that type II collagen is widely distributed in a temporally and spatially regulated fashion in basement membranes throughout the trunk of the embryo at stages 14 through 19, including regions with no apparent relationship to chondrogenesis. Immunohistochemical staining with two different monoclonal antibodies against type II collagen, as well as with an affinity-purified polyclonal antibody, is detectable in the basement membranes of the neural tube, notochord, auditory vesicle, dorsal/lateral surface ectoderm, lateral/ventral gut endoderm, mesonephric duct, and basal surface of the splanchnic mesoderm subjacent to the dorsal aorta, and at the interface between the epimyocardium and endocardium of the developing heart. In contrast, immunoreactive type IX collagen is detectable only in the perinotochordal sheath in the trunk of the embryo at these stages of development. Thus type II collagen is much more widely distributed during early development than previously thought, and may be fulfilling some as yet undefined function, unrelated to chondrogenesis, during early embryogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The fragments of minor collagens of cartilages, called HMW and LMW, were isolated after pepsin treatment of sternal cartilages of young chickens and were shown to be entirely triple-helical molecules as judged by their circular dichroic spectra. Studies on renaturation kinetics of HMW suggested that the interchain disulfide bonds in HMW reside at one of the ends of the so-called long arm. Polyclonal antibodies against HMW were raised and affinity purified. These antibodies did not cross-react with type II collagen nor with other minor collagens such as LMW and 1 alpha, 2 alpha, 3 alpha collagen in native or denatured structure. The antibodies were used to identify HMW-related molecules which were synthesized by embryonic chick cartilages in vitro. Some of these molecules were secreted into the organ culture medium and could be recovered from it by ammonium sulfate precipitation. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of this precipitate gave one band of high molecular weight which could be reduced to two bands migrating slightly faster than the alpha 1(II) chain when identified by immunoblotting. These bands could also be identified among about six radiolabelled polypeptides present in the ammonium sulfate precipitate of medium proteins when analysed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by fluorography. The same polypeptides could be recovered from the medium by immunoprecipitation with anti-HMW antibodies. Their presence in cartilage tissue was shown by immunoblotting of material extracted from cartilage tissue and separated on polyacrylamide gels. We suggest that the protein containing these polypeptide chains represents the parent molecule of the peptic fragment HMW as it is synthesized in vivo and have designated it p-HMW-collagen.  相似文献   

15.
We studied the interaction of proteoglycan subunit with both types I and II collagen. All three molecular species were isolated from the ox. Type II collagen, prepared from papain-digested bovine nasal cartilage, was characterized by gel electrophoresis, amino acid analysis and CM-cellulose chromatography. By comparison of type I collagen, prepared from papain-digested calf skin, with native calf skin acid-soluble tropocollagen, we concluded that the papain treatment left the collagen molecules intact. Interactions were carried out at 4 degrees C in 0.06 M-sodium acetate, pH 4.8, and the results were studied by two slightly different methods involving CM-cellulose chromatography and polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. It was demonstrated that proteoglycan subunit, from bovine nasal cartilage, bound to cartilage collagen. Competitive-interaction experiments showed that, in the presence of equal amounts of calf skin acid-soluble tropocollagen (type I) and bovine nasal cartilage collagen (type II), proteoglycan subunit bound preferentially to the type I collagen. We suggest from these results that, although not measured under physiological conditions, it is unlikely that the binding in vivo between type II collagen and proteoglycan is appreciably stronger than that between type I collagen and proteoglycan.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Type X collagen was prepared from medium of long-term cultures of embryonic chick tibiotarsal chondrocytes. Antibodies to type X collagen were raised and used in immunoperoxidase localization studies with embryonic and growing chick tibiotarsus. Strong anti-type X collagen reactivity was detected mainly in the region of hypertrophic chondrocytes, and to a lesser extent in the zone of calcified cartilage. No reactivity was detected in the proliferative zone nor the superficial layer of the cartilage growth plate. These results suggest that type X collagen may play a key role in matrix calcification during growth and development of the skeletal system.  相似文献   

18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(6):1724-1736
Polyclonal antibodies were raised in a rabbit against the major proteoglycan of chick sternal cartilage. A total of six antisera was obtained, three after the first booster injection (A1, A2, and A3) and three after the second booster injection (A4, A5, and A6). The A1 antiserum, which was characterized in most detail, immunoprecipitated native as well as chondroitinase ABC-digested or chondroitinase ABC/keratanase-digested cartilage proteoglycan synthesized by cultured chick chondroblasts, but failed to immunoprecipitate the major proteoglycan synthesized by chick skin fibroblasts. This antiserum was also able to immunoprecipitate the cartilage proteoglycan core protein newly synthesized by cultured chondroblasts, but no other major cell protein. However, the late bleed antisera obtained from the same rabbit after a second booster injection reacted with a new chondroblast- specific polypeptide(s) of approximately 60,000 mol wt in addition to the cartilage proteoglycan. By immunofluorescence procedures, the A1 antiserum stained the extracellular proteoglycan matrix of cultured chondroblasts but not that of skin fibroblasts. Following enzymatic removal of the extracellular matrix and cell membrane permeabilization, this antiserum stained primarily a large, juxtanuclear structure. Additional radioautographic evidence suggests that this structure represents the Golgi complex. Similar immunofluorescent staining with antibodies to the cartilage-characteristic Type II collagen revealed that type II procollagen was localized in numerous cytoplasmic, vacuole- like structures which were scattered throughout most of the chondroblast cytoplasm but were notably scanty in the Golgi complex area. In conclusion, our data suggest the transit of the major cartilage proteoglycan through the Golgi complex of cultured chondroblasts and possible differences in the intracellular distribution of newly synthesized cartilage proteoglycan and Type II procollagen.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The tissue distribution of type II and type IX collagen in 17-d-old chicken embryo was studied by immunofluorescence using polyclonal antibodies against type II collagen and a peptic fragment of type IX collagen (HMW), respectively. Both proteins were found only in cartilage where they were co-distributed. They occurred uniformly throughout the extracellular matrix, i.e., without distinction between pericellular, territorial, and interterritorial matrices. Tissues that undergo endochondral bone formation contained type IX collagen, whereas periosteal and membranous bones were negative. The thin collagenous fibrils in cartilage consisted of type II collagen as determined by immunoelectron microscopy. Type IX collagen was associated with the fibrils but essentially was restricted to intersections of the fibrils. These observations suggested that type IX collagen contributes to the stabilization of the network of thin fibers of the extracellular matrix of cartilage by interactions of its triple helical domains with several fibrils at or close to their intersections.  相似文献   

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