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1.
The assembly of proteoglycan aggregates in chondrocyte cell cultures was examined in pulse-chase experiments with the use of [35S]sulphate for labelling. Rate-zonal centrifugation in linear sucrose density gradients (10-50%, w/v) was used to separate the aggregated proteoglycans from monomers and to assess the size of the newly formed aggregates. The proportion of aggregates stabilized by link protein was assessed by competition with added exogenous aggregate components. The capacity of the proteoglycans synthesized in culture to compete with exogenous nasal-cartilage proteoglycans for binding was studied in dissociation-reassociation experiments. The results were as follows. (a) The proteoglycan monomers and the hyaluronic acid are exported separately and combined extracellularly. (b) The size of the aggregates increases gradually with time as the proportion of monomers bound to hyaluronic acid increases. (c) All of the aggregates present at a particular time appear to be link-stabilized and therefore not dissociated by added excess of nasal-cartilage proteoglycan monomer or hyaluronic acid oligomers. (d) The free monomer is apparently present as a complex with link protein. The monomer-link complexes are then aggregated to the hyaluronic acid. (e) The aggregates synthesized in vitro and the nasal-cartilage aggregates differ when tested for link-stabilization by incubation at low pH. The aggregates synthesized in vitro were completely dissociated whereas the cartilage proteoglycans remained aggregated. The results obtained from dissociation-reassociation experiments performed at low pH indicate that the proteoglycan monomer synthesized in vitro does not bind the hyaluronic acid or the link protein as strongly as does the nasal-cartilage monomer.  相似文献   

2.
Cultured chondrocytes from the Swarm rat chondrosarcoma incorporate [35S]sulfate into proteoglycans typical of hyaline cartilage. The movement of newly synthesized proteoglycans from inside the cells into the extracellular matrix and, finally, into the culture medium was examined by measuring the distribution of 35S-labeled proteoglycans in the medium, a 4 M guanidine HCl extract of the cell layer, and in the remaining residue for a number of chase times following a 5-min pulse with [35S]sulfate. When hyaluronate oligosaccharides containing greater than or equal to 10 monosaccharides were included in the chase media, a proportion of newly synthesized proteoglycans were displaced from the matrix (4 M extract) into the culture medium. This displacement was greatest when oligomers were in the chase media between 10 and 20 min after the pulse, approximately the time when the molecules are being secreted from the cells. The proportion of link-stabilized aggregate in the medium was examined by Sepharose 2B chromatography after adding an excess of unlabeled monomer which displaces labeled monomer from complexes with hyaluronate which are not link-stabilized. The proportion of link-stabilized aggregate increased from 12% to about 70% between 12 and 120 min of chase. The presence of 40 micron hyaluronate oligosaccharides of 16 monosaccharides in the chase media retarded but did not prevent aggregate formation. Oligomers of about 50 monosaccharides, which are large enough to bind both a monomer proteoglycan and a link protein, almost completely prevented the formation of the large link-stabilized aggregates. The results suggest: (a) newly synthesized proteoglycans are not bound into link-stabilized aggregates at the time of secretion; (b) hyaluronic acid oligomers which are long enough to interact only with the hyaluronic acid-binding site of proteoglycans will retard but not prevent link-stabilized aggregation; and (c) hyaluronic acid oligomers long enough to accommodate additionally a link protein form a link-stabilized ternary complex and prevent aggregation with larger hyaluronic acid molecules.  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.
Proteoglycan aggregates were isolated from bovine aorta by extraction with 0.5 M guanidine hydrochloride in the presence of proteinase inhibitors and purified by isopycnic CsCl centrifugation. The bottom two-fifths (A1) of the gradient contained 30% of proteoglycans in the aggregated form. The aggregate had 14.8% protein and 20.4% hexuronic acid with hyaluronic acid, dermatan sulfate and chondroitin sulfates in a proportion of 18:18:69. A link protein-containing fraction was isolated from the bottom two-fifths by dissociative CsCl isopycnic centrifugation. The link protein that floated to the top one-fifth of the gradient was purified by chromatography on Sephadex G-200 in the presence of 4 M guanidine hydrochloride. It moved as a single band in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with a molecular weight of 49 000. The amino acid composition of link protein resembled that of link protein from cartilage, but was strikingly different from that of the protein core of the proteoglycan monomer. The neutral sugar content of link protein was 3.5% of dry weight. Galactose, mannose and fucose constituted 21, 62 and 16%, respectively of the total neutral sugars. In aggregation studies the link protein was found to interact with both proteoglycan monomer and hyaluronic acid. Oligosaccharides derived from hyaluronic acid decreased the viscosity of link protein-free aggregates of proteoglycan and hyaluronic acid but not of link-stabilized aggregates, demonstrating that the link protein increases the stability of proteoglycan aggregates.  相似文献   

5.
Adult rabbit articular cartilage was labelled in vivo over 48 h with [35S]sulphate and was then incubated in organ culture at pH 7.2. Approx. 65% of the tissue content of [35S]proteoglycan was released into the culture medium during the first 48 h of incubation. The average molecular size of the released proteoglycans, as assessed by fractionation on Sepharose 2B/CL and 4B/Cl, was only slightly smaller than that of the proteoglycans extracted from non-cultured cartilage with 4 M guanidine HCl. The percentage of released proteoglycans and extracted proteoglycans which formed aggregates with hyaluronic acid was approx. 25% and 75%, respectively. The results indicate that proteoglycan degradation in adult articular cartilage is initiated by a limited proteolysis of subunit core protein, with the production of non-aggregating species which diffuse readily from the tissue.  相似文献   

6.
Radioisotopically labeled proteoglycans were isolated from a 4 M guanidine HCl, 2% Triton X-100 extract of corneal stroma from day 18 chicken embryos by anion-exchange chromatography. Two predominant proteoglycans in the sample were separated by octyl-Sepharose chromatography using a gradient elution of detergent in 4 M guanidine HCl. One proteoglycan had an overall mass of approximately 125 kDa, a single dermatan sulfate chain (approximately 85-90% chondroitin 4-sulfate, low iduronate content) of approximately 65 kDa, and a core protein after chondroitinase ABC digestion of approximately 45 kDa which also contained one to three N-linked oligosaccharides and one O-linked oligosaccharide. The other proteoglycan had an overall size of approximately 100 kDa, two to three keratan sulfate chains of approximately 15 kDa each, and a core protein following keratanase digestion of approximately 51 kDa which included two to three N-linked but no O-linked oligosaccharides. A larger size, a greater overall hydrophobicity (as measured by its interaction with octyl-Sepharose) and an absence of O-linked oligosaccharides argue that this core protein is a distinct gene product from the core protein of the dermatan sulfate proteoglycan.  相似文献   

7.
Proteoglycans exist in cartilage as complexes in which many proteoglycan molecules are bound to a central filament of hyaluronic acid. Many studies have investigated changes taking place in proteoglycan monomer structure during cartilage catabolism usually under the assumption that hyaluronic acid is a relatively inert metabolic component of the complex. In this paper we present organ culture data supporting a new hypothesis that the catabolism of proteoglycans and hyaluronic acid are coordinately regulated by chondrocytes. The data indicates that: 1) newly synthesized hyaluronate and proteoglycan maintain a nearly constant ratio, almost identical to that existing for the total chemical amounts of these two components in cartilage tissue; 2) these two components are catabolized with virtually identical kinetics; and 3) this catabolic relationship in vitro reflects the loss of hyaluronate and proteoglycans from native, undissociated aggregates as isolated from the tissue. We conclude that hyaluronate catabolism is an integral part of the overall mechanism of proteoglycan resorption in cartilage and that further understanding of this process may be key to the elucidation of the regulatory pathways for proteoglycan resorption in health and disease.  相似文献   

8.
Mouse mammary epithelial (NMuMG) cells produce both cellular and extracellular heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycans. A cellular proteoglycan, but no extracellular proteoglycans, associates quantitatively and vectorially with lipid vesicles, as assessed by column chromatography and centrifugation. This lipophilic cellular proteoglycan is extracted as an aggregate when cells are treated with 4 M guanidine HCl, but is extracted as a single component in the presence of detergent, suggesting that it aggregates with cellular lipid. An association with lipid is confirmed by intercalation of the proteoglycan into the bilayer of lipid vesicles. Formation of lipid vesicles in the presence of the proteoglycan causes the proteoglycan to have the chromatographic and sedimentation behavior of the vesicles while destruction of the vesicles with detergent nullifies this effect. The proteoglycan is intercalated nullifies this effect. The proteoglycan is intercalated into the vesicles with its glycosaminoglycan-containing domain exposed to the exterior since mild trypsin treatment quantitatively removes this portion of the proteoglycan from the vesicle. After cleavage from the vesicle, the released proteoglycan chromatographs with an apparent molecular size similar to that of the whole proteoglycan, but no longer aggregates with lipid. Thus, trypsin removes a lipophilic domain which is responsible for its interaction with lipid and presumably anchors the proteoglycan in cellular membranes.  相似文献   

9.
Two proteoglycan fractions, PCS-H and PCS-L, have previously been isolated from 4 M guanidine HCl extract of embryonic chick cartilages. This communication reports further studies with PCS-L indicating that this fraction contains several different forms, of which one differs from hitherto known cartilage proteoglycans in 1) markedly lower buoyant density, 2) susceptibility to reduction with 2-mercaptoethanol, 3) aggregate-forming ability in 4 M guanidine HCl, and 4) presence of dermatan sulfate-chondroitin sulfate copolymer chains. Also isolated from the PCS-L fraction is a keratan sulfate-rich proteoglycan which represents the smallest molecular size species in cartilage proteoglycan populations.  相似文献   

10.
Near confluent monolayers of arterial smooth muscle cells derived from Macaca nemestrina were labeled with Na2[35S]O4 and the newly synthesized proteoglycans present in the culture medium and cell layer were extracted with either 4 M guanidine HCl (dissociative solvent) or 0.5 M guanidine HCl (associative solvent) in the presence of protease inhibitors. The proteoglycans in both compartments were further purified by cesium chloride density gradient ultracentrifugation. Two size classes of proteoglycans were observed in the medium as determined by chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B. The large population (Kav = 0.31) contained predominantly chondroitin sulfate chains with Mr = approximately 40,000. The smaller population (Kav = 0.61) contained dermatan sulfate chains of similar Mr (approximately 40,000). When tested for their ability to aggregate, only proteoglycans in the large-sized population were able to aggregate. A chondroitin sulfate containing proteoglycan with identical properties was isolated from the cell layer. In addition, the cell layer contained a dermatan sulfate component which eluted later on Sepharose CL-2B (Kav = 0.78) than the dermatan sulfate proteoglycan present in the medium. Electron microscopy of the purified proteoglycans revealed a bottlebrush structure containing a central core averaging 140 nm in length with an average of 8 to 10 side projections. The length of the side projections varied but averaged between 70 and 75 nm. Similar bottlebrush structures were observed in the intercellular matrix of the smooth muscle cell cultures after staining with Safranin 0. This culture system provides a model to investigate parameters involved in the regulation of synthesis and degradation of arterial proteoglycans.  相似文献   

11.
Of three kinds of commercial zwitterionic detergents [SB 12, SB 14, and 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (Chaps)], SB 12 and Chaps were more useful than SB 14 because of high solubility and less interference with protein assay. Efficiency for protein solubilization at pH 6-9 was higher for SB 12 than for Chaps with either calf thymus chromatin or rat liver nuclei. At pH 9 and ionic strength (I) = 0.35, 1% SB 12 and 1% Chaps were capable of solubilizing about 70% and about 47% of total proteins in rat liver nuclei, respectively. Core histones in rat liver nuclei were extracted to a lesser extent with Chaps than with SB 12. DNA-dependent RNA polymerase and isopeptidase activities were barely inactivated by 1% Chaps at pH 8-9, but isopeptidase activity was inhibited by 0.3% SB 12. These facts indicate that whereas SB 12 is effective for solubilization of whole nuclear proteins, Chaps is suitable for the selective extraction of nonhistone chromosomal proteins without denaturation.  相似文献   

12.
We studied the effect of complexes of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) and different proteoglycan preparations from bovine aorta on LDL degradation and cholesteryl ester accumulation in mouse peritoneal macrophages. Native proteoglycan aggregate containing proteoglycan monomers, hyaluronic acid and link protein was isolated by associative extraction of aortic tissue, while proteoglycan monomer was obtained by dissociative isopycnic centrifugation of the native proteoglycan aggregate. In vitro proteoglycan aggregates were prepared by reaction of the proteoglycan monomer with exogenous hyaluronic acid. 125I-labeled LDL-proteoglycan complexes were formed in the presence of 30 mM Ca2+ and incubated with macrophages. At equivalent uronic acid levels in the proteoglycans the degradation of 125I-labeled LDL contained in the native proteoglycan aggregate complex was 3.7-7.5-fold greater than the degradation of the lipoprotein in the proteoglycan monomer complex. Degradation of 125I-LDL in the in vitro aggregate complex, while higher than that in the monomer complex, was markedly less than that in the native aggregate complex. The larger size and the greater complex-forming ability of the native proteoglycan aggregate might account for the greater capacity of the aggregate to promote LDL degradation in macrophages. The proteoglycan-stimulated degradation of LDL produced a marked increase in cholesteryl ester synthesis and content in macrophages. The LDL-proteoglycan complex was degraded with saturation kinetics, suggesting that these complexes are internalized through high-affinity receptors. Degradation was inhibited by the lysosomotropic agent, chloroquine. Acetyl-LDL, but not native LDL, competitively inhibited the degradation of the 125I-LDL component of the complex. Polyanionic compounds such as polyinosinic acid and fucoidin, while completely blocking the acetyl-LDL-stimulated cholesteryl ester formation, had no effect on the proteoglycan aggregate-stimulated cholesterol esterification. This suggests that LDL-proteoglycan complex and acetyl-LDL are not entering the cells through the same receptor pathway. These results demonstrate that the interaction of LDL with arterial wall proteoglycan aggregates results in marked cholesteryl ester accumulation in macrophages, a process likely to favor foam cell formation. A role for arterial proteoglycans in atherosclerosis is obvious.  相似文献   

13.
Adult rabbit articular cartilage was labelled in vivo over 48 h with [35S]sulphate and was then incubated in organ culture at pH 7.2. Approx. 65% of the tissue content of [35S]proteoglycan was released into the culture medium during the first 48 h of incubation. The average molecular size of the released proteoglycans, as assessed by fractionation on Sepharose 2B/CL and 4B/Cl, was only slightly smaller than that of the proteoglycans extracted from non-cultured cartilage with 4 M guanidine HCl. The percentage of released proteoglycans and extracted proteoglycans which formed aggregates with hyaluronic acid was approx. 25% and 75%, respectively. The results indicate that proteoglycan degradation in adult articular cartilage is initiated by a limited proteolysis of subunit core protein, with the [roduction of non-aggregating species which diffuse readily from the tissue.  相似文献   

14.
During the course of characterization of low molecular weight proteins in cartilage, we have isolated a protein from reef shark (Carcharhinus springeri) cartilage that bears a striking resemblance to the tetranectin monomer originally described by Clemmensen et al. (1986, Eur. J. Biochem. 156, 327-333). The protein was isolated by extraction of neural arch cartilage with 4 M guanidine hydrochloride, dialysis of the extract to bring the guanidine to 0.4 M (reassociating proteoglycan aggregates), followed by cesium chloride density gradient removal of the proteoglycans. The amino acid sequence had 166 amino acids and a calculated molecular weight of 18,430. The shark protein was 45% identical to human tetranectin, indicating that it was in the family of mammalian C-type lectins and that it was likely to be a shark analog of human tetranectin. The function of tetranectin is unknown; it was originally isolated by virtue of its affinity for the kringle-4 domain of plasminogen. Sequence comparison of human tetranectin and the shark-derived protein gives clues to potentially important regions of the molecule.  相似文献   

15.
Subcutaneous implantation of demineralized bone matrix in rats induces migration of host cells into the site and results in the sequential development of cartilage and bone. The biosynthesis and metabolic fate of proteoglycans in the plaques at the bone matrix implantation site were investigated by [35S]sulfate labeling in vivo. 35S-Labeled proteoglycans were extracted with 4 M guanidine HCl and purified by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography. Analysis of proteoglycans on Sepharose CL-2B chromatography showed two major peaks at Kd = 0.28 and 0.68 (peaks I and II, respectively). Peak I proteoglycan has a high buoyant density and contains chondroitin sulfate chains of average Mr = 20,000. Peak II proteoglycan has a lower average buoyant density and contains dermatan sulfate chains of average Mr = 33,000. Throughout the endochondral bone development sequence, peak II proteoglycan predominates. Peak I was low on Day 3, became prominent on Day 7 (approximately 30% of the total radioactivity), and declined after Day 9. The calculated half-lives of peak I and II proteoglycans labeled on Day 7 were about 1.8 and 2.8 days, respectively. After the initiation of osteogenesis, a species of mineral-associated proteoglycan was extracted with a 4 M guanidine HCl solvent containing 0.5 M EDTA. This proteoglycan has a small hydrodynamic size (Kd = 0.38 on Sepharose CL-6B chromatography) and shows a long half-life, about 6 days.  相似文献   

16.
Proteoglycans synthesized by rat chondrosarcoma cells in culture are secreted into the culture medium through a pericellular matrix. The appearance of [35S]sulphate in secreted proteoglycan after a 5 min pulse was rapid (half-time, t 1/2 less than 10 min), but that of [3H]serine into proteoglycan measured after a 15 min pulse was much slower (t 1/2 120 min). The incorporation of [3H]serine into secreted protein was immediately inhibited by 1 mM-cycloheximide, but the incorporation of [35S]sulphate into proteoglycans was only inhibited gradually(t 1/2 79 min), suggesting the presence of a large intracellular pool of proteoglycan that did not carry sulphated glycosaminoglycans. Cultures were pulsed with [3H]serine and [35S]sulphate and chased for up to 6 h in the presence of 1 mM-cycloheximide. Analysis showed that cycloheximide-chased cells secreted less than 50% of the [3H]serine in proteoglycan of control cultures and the rate of incorporation into secreted proteoglycan was decreased (from t 1/2 120 min to t 1/2 80 min). Under these conditions cycloheximide interfered with the flow of proteoglycan protein core along the route of intracellular synthesis leading to secretion, as well as inhibiting further protein core synthesis. The results suggested that the newly synthesized protein core of proteoglycan passes through an intracellular pool for about 70-90 min before the chondroitin sulphate chains are synthesized on it, and it is then rapidly secreted from the cell. Proteoglycan produced by cultures incubated in the presence of cycloheximide and labelled with [35S]sulphate showed an increase with time of both the average proteoglycan size and the length of the constituent chondroitin sulphate chain. However, the proportion of synthesized proteoglycans able to form stable aggregates did not alter.  相似文献   

17.
M W Lark  L A Culp 《Biochemistry》1983,22(9):2289-2296
Newly formed adhesion sites, left bound to the tissue culture substratum after [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)] tetraacetic acid mediated detachment of simian virus 40 transformed Balb/c 3T3 cells, have been extracted with 0.5 M guanidine hydrochloride or Zwittergent (3-12), extractions which identify different subfractions of proteoglycans in these sites. The compositions of these extracts were then compared to similar extracts of "maturing" adhesion sites in an effort to identify structural and metabolic changes which may occur with time and which may play a role in altering adhesion during cell movement. Guanidine hydrochloride (0.5 M) extracts both hyaluronate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan from newly formed sites (but which are not complexed in an aggregate similar to that found in cartilage) but only hyaluronate from fully matured sites, indicating that the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans somehow become resistant to extraction with time. Both high and low molecular weight forms of hyaluronate also accumulate in sites with time. Zwittergent 3-12 solubilizes free chains of heparan sulfate but not heparan sulfate proteoglycan from either class of sites. Most of the heparan sulfate in newly formed sites occurs as a large proteoglycan excludable from Sepharose CL-6B columns under stringent dissociative conditions; however, as adhesion sites "mature", a portion of this proteoglycan appears to be converted by some unknown mechanism to free heparan sulfate chains. This process may very well weaken the close adhesive contacts between the cell and substratum mediated by fibronectin's binding to the highly multivalent heparan sulfate proteoglycans. These studies further indicate that there is considerable metabolism and changing intermolecular associations of proteoglycans within these sites during movement of fibroblasts over this model extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

18.
This study has examined changes in proteoglycan synthesis during megakaryocyte maturation in vivo. Guinea pigs were injected with Na235SO4, and megakaryocytes and platelets were isolated from 3 h to 5 days later. The proteoglycans and other sulfated molecules in both cells were characterized at each time point by gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, gel electrophoresis, and chemical and enzymatic digestions. Two populations of chondroitin 6-sulfate proteoglycans were found by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography. The major fraction was eluted with 4 M guanidine hydrochloride and the minor fraction with 4 M guanidine HCl, 2% Triton X-100. The Kav of the major proteoglycan peak in the platelets at 1 day after injection was 0.18-0.20 on Sepharose CL-6B and decreased gradually to 0.12 by 3 days, when proteoglycan radioactivity per cell was maximal. The peak for megakaryocyte proteoglycans at 3 h was broad, with Kav = 0.1-0.2. The appearance of different portions of the proteoglycan peak in platelets coincided with their disappearance from megakaryocytes. Proteoglycan size was a function of glycosaminoglycan chain length. The proteoglycans eluted with Triton X-100 from DEAE-Sephacel (Kav = 0.04-0.07 on Sepharose CL-6B) were not labeled in platelets until 2 days after injection. Our data suggest that megakaryocytes synthesize different-sized chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans at different stages of development. The proteoglycans of the major fraction were released from platelets in response to thrombin, and a small amount was released by ADP. The proteoglycans of the Triton X-100 eluate were not released by thrombin or ADP. About 20% of the sulfate radioactivity was incorporated into molecules that appear to be sulfated proteins and were not released by thrombin or ADP.  相似文献   

19.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(6):3187-3198
Reichert's membrane, an extraembryonic membrane present in developing rodents, has been proposed as an in vivo model for the study of basement membranes. We have used this membrane as a source for isolation of basement membrane proteoglycans. Reichert's membranes were extracted in a guanidine/3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1- propanesulfonate buffer followed by cesium chloride density-gradient ultracentrifugation under dissociative conditions. The proteoglycans were subsequently purified from the two most dense fractions (greater than 1.3 g/ml) by ion-exchange chromatography. Mice were immunized with the proteoglycan preparation and four mAbs recognizing the core protein of a high-density, buoyant chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan were raised. Confirmation of antibody specificity was carried out by the preparation of affinity columns made from each of the mAbs. Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) were purified from both supernatant and tissue fractions of Reichert's membranes incubated in short-term organ culture in the presence of radiolabel. The resultant affinity-purified proteoglycan samples were examined by gel filtration, SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotting. This proteoglycan is of high molecular weight (Mr = 5-6 x 10(5)), with a core protein of Mr = approximately 1.5-1.6 x 10(5) and composed exclusively of chondroitin sulfate chains with an average Mr = 1.6-1.8 x 10(4). In addition, a CSPG was purified from adult rat kidney, whose core protein was also Mr = 1.6 x 10(5). The proteoglycan and its core protein were also recognized by all four mAbs. Indirect immunofluorescence of rat tissue sections stained with these antibodies reveal a widespread distribution of this proteoglycan, localized specifically to Reichert's membrane and nearly all basement membranes of rat tissues. In addition to heparan sulfate proteoglycans, it therefore appears that at least one CSPG is a widespread basement membrane component.  相似文献   

20.
It has been previously shown that undifferentiated stage 23 to 24 chick limb bud mesenchymal cells can be maintained in culture under conditions which promote chondrogenesis. As the chondrocytes mature in vitro, their proteoglycan synthesis progresses through a specific and reproducible biosynthetic program. By the eighth day of culture, the chondrocytes are making proteoglycans that are similar to proteoglycans isolated from adult animal tissues. Relative to the Day 8 proteoglycans, the proteoglycans synthesized by chick limb bud chondrocytes earlier in culture have a smaller monomer size, longer chondroitin sulfate chains, shorter keratan sulfate chains, a higher ratio of chondroitin-6-sulfate to chondroitin-4-sulfate, and a decreased ability to interact with hyaluronic acid. We have reported a procedure to remove the cells from Day 8 cultures and strip away most, if not all, of the extracellular matrix. In addition, the chondrocytes can be separated from the 40-50% nonchondrocytic cells normally found in Day 8 cultures, and the two cell populations replated separately. This report describes the analysis of the proteoglycans synthesized by replated cells; this analysis demonstrates quantitative and qualitative differences between chondrocyte and nonchondrocyte proteoglycans. The overall rate of proteoglycan synthesis is fourfold higher and the rate of synthesis of high buoyant density proteoglycans 30-fold higher for replated chondrocytes relative to nonchondrocytes. Qualitatively, more newly synthesized nonchondrocyte proteoglycans partition at lower buoyant density on CsCl equilibrium density gradients than do chondrocyte proteoglycans. Nonchondrocyte proteoglycans are of two major classes: One has a monomer size slightly smaller than that of Day 8 chondrocyte proteoglycan, but has much longer glycosaminoglycan chains. The other is considerably smaller than Day 8 chondrocyte proteoglycans, but has glycosaminoglycans of slightly larger size. In contrast, replated chondrocytes synthesize, even as soon as 4.5 hr after replating, proteoglycans that are identical to Day 8 chondrocyte proteoglycan in monomer size, in glycosaminoglycan chain size, in aggregability, and in the ratio of 6-sulfated to 4-sulfated chondroitin. Since denuding mature Day 8 chondrocytes of their extracellular matrix does not cause them to recapitulate their developmentally regulated program for the biosynthesis of proteoglycans, it is concluded that the quality of mature chondrocyte proteoglycan is not altered by the absence of extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

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