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1.
The distribution of laminin, type IV collagen, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and fibronectin was investigated in the rat testicular lamina propria by electron microscopic immunocytochemistry. Distinct patterns were observed for each antigen within the extracellular matrix (ECM) layers of the lamina propria. Laminin, type IV collagen, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan all localized to the seminiferous tubule basement membrane. Type IV collagen and heparan sulfate proteoglycan, but not laminin, localized to the seminiferous tubule side of the peritubular myoid cells. All four of the antigens were localized between the peritubular and lymphatic endothelial cells. Failure to localize fibronectin in the ECM layer between the Sertoli and peritubular myoid cells tends to support the concept that adult Sertoli cells do not produce this protein in vivo. Intracellular immunostaining was insufficient to allow unambiguous identification of the cellular source of any of the ECM molecules.  相似文献   

2.
Mitsi M  Hong Z  Costello CE  Nugent MA 《Biochemistry》2006,45(34):10319-10328
Regulation of angiogenesis involves interactions between vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and components of the extracellular matrix, including fibronectin and heparan sulfate. In the present study, we identified two classes of VEGF binding sites on fibronectin. One was constitutively available whereas the availability of the other was modulated by the conformational state of fibronectin. Atomic force microscopy studies revealed that heparin and hydrophilic substrates promoted the extended conformation of fibronectin, leading to increased VEGF binding. The ability of heparin to enhance VEGF binding to fibronectin was dependent on the chemical composition and chain length of heparin, since long (>22 saccharides) heparin chains with sulfation on the 6-O and N positions of glucosamine units were required for full activity. Treatment of the complex endothelial extracellular matrix with heparin also increased VEGF binding, suggesting that heparin/heparan sulfate might regulate VEGF interactions within the extracellular matrix by controlling the structure and organization of fibronectin matrices.  相似文献   

3.
Cultured human vascular endothelial cells synthesize von Willebrand protein, thrombospondin and fibronectin. These proteins are secreted in the culture medium and incorporated into the extracellular matrix. We have compared the subcellular localization and the secretion of these proteins in response to stimulants in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Density gradient centrifugation using colloidal silica showed that the storage and secretion organelle with von Willebrand protein did not contain thrombospondin or fibronectin. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy indicated that thrombospondin and fibronectin are not located in the rod-shaped organelles containing von Willebrand protein. Thrombin, ionophore A23187 and phorbol myristate acetate did not affect secretion of thrombospondin and fibronectin, while von Willebrand protein secretion was stimulated upon incubation of cells with these agents for 30 min. Prolonged incubation of cultured endothelial cells after a 1-h treatment with phorbol myristate acetate resulted in an increased secretion of von Willebrand protein into the conditioned medium; in contrast, accumulation of thrombospondin and fibronectin in endothelial cell-conditioned medium was decreased. These findings indicate that, unlike in platelets, these major endothelial proteins are not located in the same subcellular compartments. Von Willebrand protein is distinguished from thrombospondin and fibronectin both by its unique subcellular localization and its secretion rate in response to stimuli.  相似文献   

4.
The extracellular matrix of cultured human lung fibroblasts contains one major heparan sulfate proteoglycan. This proteoglycan contains a 400-kDa core protein and is structurally and immunochemically identical or closely related to the heparan sulfate proteoglycans that occur in basement membranes. Because heparitinase does not release the core protein from the matrix of cultured cells, we investigated the binding interactions of this heparan sulfate proteoglycan with other components of the fibroblast extracellular matrix. Both the intact proteoglycan and the heparitinase-resistant core protein were found to bind to fibronectin. The binding of 125I-labeled core protein to immobilized fibronectin was inhibited by soluble fibronectin and by soluble cold core protein but not by albumin or gelatin. A Scatchard plot indicates a Kd of about 2 x 10(-9) M. Binding of the core protein was also inhibited by high concentrations of heparin, heparan sulfate, or chrondroitin sulfate and was sensitive to high salt concentrations. Thermolysin fragmentation of the 125I-labeled proteoglycan yielded glycosamino-glycan-free core protein fragments of approximately 110 and 62 kDa which bound to both fibronectin and heparin columns. The core protein-binding capacity of fibronectin was very sensitive to proteolysis. Analysis of thermolytic and alpha-chymotryptic fragments of fibronectin showed binding of the intact proteoglycan and of its isolated core protein to a protease-sensitive fragment of 56 kDa which carried the gelatin-binding domain of fibronectin and to a protease-sensitive heparin-binding fragment of 140 kDa. Based on the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence analyses of the 56- and 140-kDa fragments, the core protein-binding domain in fibronectin was tentatively mapped in the area of overlap of the two fragments, carboxyl-terminally from the gelatin-binding domain, possibly in the second type III repeat of fibronectin. These data document a specific and high affinity interaction between fibronectin and the core protein of the matrix heparan sulfate proteoglycan which may anchor the proteoglycan in the matrix.  相似文献   

5.
Thrombospondin is a cell adhesion molecule which interacts via specific domains with a wide array of extracellular matrix components, including fibrinogen, fibrin, fibronectin, collagen, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Although this protein has been localized in several human tissues, its presence in corneal tissues had not been previously established. In the present study, we have demonstrated that cultured bovine corneal endothelial cells synthesize thrombospondin and incorporate it into their extracellular matrix. We have also shown immunofluorescently the presence and distribution of thrombospondin in these cultured cells and in the noninjured and injured corneal endothelium in situ. Ultrastructural immunoperoxidase cytochemistry revealed that thrombospondin could be displaced from the cell surface by heparin, but not by keratan sulfate. Confluent cultures of corneal endothelium synthesize and secrete the three cell adhesion proteins laminin, thrombospondin, and fibronectin in the ratios 1:8.2:51.8. Only the laminin B chains were detected in immunoprecipitates. Immunofluorescent studies of these cultured cells, using a polyclonal antiserum raised against purified thrombospondin, revealed a low level of fluorescence associated with the cell layer but a punctate fluorescent pattern at the level of the extracellular matrix. Noninjured corneal endothelium in situ also demonstrated a low level of fluorescence throughout the cell layer. However, this dramatically changed after a circular freeze injury to the tissue. By 24 h after wounding, cells surrounding the injury zone displayed a prominent fluorescence that was still observed at 48 h post-injury. In addition to its increased intracellular fluorescence, thrombospondin was also localized as migration tracks, oriented in the direction of cellular migration into the wound site. Thus, in corneal endothelium, thrombospondin appears to play a major role in injury-induced cell migration in situ along a natural basement membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) enters cells by attaching to cellular receptor molecules of the integrin family, one of which has been identified as the RGD-binding integrin alpha(v)beta3. Here we report that, in addition to an integrin binding site, type O strains of FMDV share with natural ligands of alpha(v)beta3 (i.e., vitronectin and fibronectin) a specific affinity for heparin and that binding to the cellular form of this sulfated glycan, heparan sulfate, is required for efficient infection of cells in culture. Binding of the virus to paraformaldehyde-fixed cells was powerfully inhibited by agents such as heparin, that compete with heparan sulfate or by agents that compete for heparan sulfate (platelet factor 4) or that inactivate it (heparinase). Neither chondroitin sulfate, a structurally related component of the extracellular matrix, nor dextran sulfate appreciably inhibited binding. The functional importance of heparan sulfate binding was demonstrated by the facts that (i) infection of live cells by FMDV could also be blocked specifically by heparin, albeit at a much higher concentration of inhibitor; (ii) pretreatment of cells with heparinase reduced the number of plaques formed compared with that for untreated cells; and (iii) mutant cell lines deficient in heparan sulfate expression were unable to support plaque formation by FMDV, even though they remained equally susceptible to another picornavirus, bovine enterovirus. The results show that entry of type O FMDV into cells is a complex process and suggest that the initial contact with the cell surface is made through heparan sulfate.  相似文献   

7.
A rat hepatoma cell line was shown to synthesize heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans. Unlike cultured hepatocytes, the hepatoma cells did not deposit these proteoglycans into an extracellular matrix, and most of the newly synthesized heparan sulfate proteoglycans were secreted into the culture medium. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans were also found associated with the cell surface. These proteoglycans could be solubilized by mild trypsin or detergent treatment of the cells but could not be displaced from the cells by incubation with heparin. The detergent-solubilized heparan sulfate proteoglycan had a hydrophobic segment that enabled it to bind to octyl- Sepharose. This segment could conceivably anchor the molecule in the lipid interior of the plasma membrane. The size of the hepatoma heparan sulfate proteoglycans was similar to that of proteoglycans isolated from rat liver microsomes or from primary cultures of rat hepatocytes. Ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel indicated that the hepatoma heparan sulfate proteoglycans had a lower average charge density than the rat liver heparan sulfate proteoglycans. The lower charge density of the hepatoma heparan sulfate can be largely attributed to a reduced number of N-sulfated glucosamine units in the polysaccharide chain compared with that of rat liver heparan sulfate. Hepatoma heparan sulfate proteoglycans purified from the culture medium had a considerably lower affinity for fibronectin-Sepharose compared with that of rat liver heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Furthermore, the hepatoma proteoglycan did not bind to the neoplastic cells, whereas heparan sulfate from normal rat liver bound to the hepatoma cells in a time-dependent reaction. The possible consequences of the reduced sulfation of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan produced by the hepatoma cells are discussed in terms of the postulated roles of heparan sulfate in the regulation of cell growth and extracellular matrix formation.  相似文献   

8.
Basement membranes are thin extracellular matrices which contact epithelial cells and promote their adhesion, migration, differentiation, and morphogenesis. These matrices are composed of collagen IV, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, laminin, and entactin as well as other minor components. Sertoli cells, like most epithelial cells, are in contact at their basal surface with a basement membrane. When cultured within three-dimensional basement membrane gels (Matrigel), Sertoli cells reorganize into cords that resemble testicular seminiferous cords found in the in vivo differentiating testis. Anti-laminin and anti-entactin antisera inhibit this cord morphogenesis by Sertoli cells whereas antisera against type IV and type I collagen, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, fibronectin, and preimmune sera had no effect. The RGD (RGDS-NH2) sequence, found in the cell binding domain of the integrin family of cell adhesion molecules as well as in the A chain of laminin and in entactin, effectively inhibited Sertoli cell cord formation at a concentration of 1.0 mg/ml but was unable to prevent Sertoli cell attachment at concentrations as high as 2.0 mg/ml. A synthetic pentapeptide from a cell-binding domain of the B1 chain of laminin. YIGSR-NH2, inhibited cord formation at a concentration of 0.25 mg/ml, but Sertoli cells were still adherent to the basement membrane matrix. At concentrations greater than 0.50 mg/ml, Sertoli cells detached. Antiserum against the YIGSR-NH2-containing sequence was also effective in inhibiting cord formation by Sertoli cells. Ligand (YIGSR-NH2 peptide) blot analysis of Sertoli cell lysates revealed an interaction with a major band at 60 kDa and with minor bands at 39 and 127 kDa. Furthermore, in Western blot analysis the anti-67-kDa laminin-binding protein antibody recognized a 59- to 60-kDa protein in Sertoli cells. The data indicate that laminin is involved in both Sertoli cell attachment and migration during formation of histotypic cord structures by these cells in culture. Two separate laminin cell-binding domains appear to be involved in Sertoli cell cord morphogenesis in vitro and are likely to participate in the formation of seminiferous cords in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Fibronectin, the major cell surface glycoprotein of fibroblasts, is absent from differentiated cartilage matrix and chondrocytes in situ. However, dissociation of embryonic chick sternal cartilage with collagenase and trypsin, followed by inoculation in vitro reinitiates fibronectin synthesis by chondrocytes. Immunofluorescence microscopy with antibodies prepared against plasma fibronectin (cold insoluble globulin [CIG]) reveals fibronectin associated with the chondrocyte surface. Synthesis and secretion of fibronectin into the medium are shown by anabolic labeling with [35S]methionine or [3H]glycine, and identification of the secreted proteins by immunoprecipitation and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-disc gel electrophoresis. When chondrocytes are plated onto tissue culture dishes, the pattern of surface-associated fibronectin changes from a patchy into a strandlike appearance. Where epithelioid clones of polygonal chondrocytes develop, only short strands of fibronectin appear preferentially at cellular interfaces. This pattern is observed as long as cells continue to produce type II collagen that fails to precipitate as extracellular collagen fibers for some time in culture. Using the immunofluorescence double-labeling technique, we demonstrate that fibroblasts as well as chondrocytes which synthesize type I collagen and deposit this collagen as extracellular fibers show a different pattern of extracellular fibronectin that codistributes in large parts with collagen fibers. Where chondrocytes begin to accumulate extracellular cartilage matrix, fibronectin strands disappear. From these observations, we conclude (a) that chondrocytes synthesize fibronectin only in the absence of extracellular cartilage matrix, and (b) that fibronectin forms only short intercellular "stitches" in the absence of extracellular collagen fibers in vitro.  相似文献   

10.
Immunofluorescent staining of a pericellular matrix produced by cultured human embryonic skin fibroblasts showed a codistribution among fibronectin, heparan sulfate proteoglycans and part of the chondroitin sulfate in a fibrillar network. Isolated matrix in an “intact” form could be scraped off the dish after detergent solubilization of the cells. On centrifugation In cesium chloride density gradients, most sulfated glycosaminoglycans and matrix proteins remained associated and were recovered at a density of 1.34 g/cm3 (≥2 M CsCI). However, when 4 M guanidine hydrochloride was included in the gradient medium, the components dissociated, suggesting that the sulfated glycosaminoglycans are bound to matrix proteins by strong noncovalent linkages. Interactions between sulfated glycosaminoglycans produced by the fibroblasts and fibronectin could also be demonstrated by affinity chromatography on immobilized plasma fibronectin and by immunoprecipitation of fibronectin in conditioned culture medium, which resulted in a coprecipitation of the sulfated glycosaminoglycans. In these two systems, the fibronectin glycosaminoglycan bonds were broken at 0.2 M salt and were apparently weaker than the bonds responsible for the structural integrity of the matrix. These findings Implicate heparan and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans as Integral components of the pericellular matrix fibers and suggest that the association of the proteoglycans with the fibronectin-procollagen matrix is stabilized by multiple molecular Interactions.  相似文献   

11.
 Invasive extravillous trophoblast cells of the human placenta are embedded in a self-secreted extracellular matrix, the matrix-type fibrinoid. The ultrastructure and molecular composition of the matrix-type fibrinoid of the term human placenta were studied by transmission electron microscopy and immunogold labelling. We used antibodies directed against different matrix proteins such as collagen type IV, laminin, vitronectin, heparan sulfate, various fibronectin isoforms, and against the oncofetal blood group antigen, ”i”. Immunogold labelling patterns of matrix proteins are the basis for the subdivision of the trophoblast-derived matrix-type fibrinoid into mosaic-like patches of structurally and immunocytochemically different compartments. Firstly, fine granular patches with structural similarities to basal lamina material are composed solely of collagen type IV and laminin. Secondly, an ultrastructurally amorphous glossy substance shows reactivity with antibodies against heparan sulfate and vitronectin. A third type of patches, fine fibrillar networks embedded in the above-mentioned glossy matrix, are reactive with antibodies against normal fibronectin isoforms (IST-4, IST-6, IST-9) and oncofetal isoforms (BC-1, FDC-6). The blood group precursor antigen ”i” was not only expressed on the surfaces of the extravillous trophoblast cells but was associated with the fibronectin-positive fibrils. In conclusion, within this extracellular matrix, clear compartments of different composition can be distinguished from each other. Glycosylation with ”i” in this matrix may be involved in immunological masking, thus preventing rejection of placenta and fetus. Accepted: 6 May 1996  相似文献   

12.
Metastatic ovarian carcinoma metastasizes by intra-peritoneal, non-hematogenous dissemination. The adhesion of the ovarian carcinoma cells to extracellular matrix components, such as types I and III collagen and cellular fibronectin, is essential for intra-peritoneal dissemination. The purpose of this study was to determine whether cell surface proteoglycans (a class of matrix receptors) are produced by ovarian carcinoma cells, and whether these proteoglycans have a role in the adhesion of ovarian carcinoma cells to types I and III collagen and fibronectin. Proteoglycans were metabolically labeled for biochemical studies. Both phosphatidylinositol-anchored and integral membrane-type cell surface proteoglycans were found to be present on the SK-OV-3 and NIH:OVCAR-3 cell lines. Three proteoglycan populations of differing hydrodynamic size were detected in both SK-OV-3 and NIH:OVCAR-3 cells. Digestions with heparitinase and chondroitinase ABC showed that cell surface proteoglycans of SK-OV-3 cells had higher proportion of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (75:25 of chondroitin sulfate:heparan sulfate ratio), while NIH:OVCAR-3 cells had higher proportion of heparan sulfate proteoglycans (10:90 of chondroitin sulfate:heparan sulfate ratio). RT-PCR indicated the synthesis of a unique assortment of syndecans, glypicans, and CD44 by the two cell lines. In adhesion assays performed on matrix-coated titer plates both cell lines adhered to types I and III collagen and cellular fibronectin, and cell adhesion was inhibited by preincubation of the matrix with heparin, heparan sulfate, chondroitin sulfate, dermatan sulfate, or chondroitin glycosaminoglycans. Treatment of the cells with heparitinase, chondroitinase ABC, or methylumbelliferyl xyloside also interfered with adhesion confirming the role of both heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate cell surface proteoglycans as matrix receptors on ovarian carcinoma cells.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Fibroblasts from rat, mouse and chick embryos cultured on poly-lysine/fibronectin- or poly-lysine/laminin-coated dishes were stained with antibodies directed to extracellular matrix molecules. The staining showed that cells had migrated during culture and deposited extracellular matrix components along their migration trails. Depending on the antigen, the staining of the matrix revealed fibrils, spots or a diffuse smear along the migration pathways. The major matrix components were fibronectin and heparan sulfate proteoglycan; however, laminin nidogen, tenascin, glia-derived nexin (GDN) and chondroitin-4-sulfate proteoglycan were also found. The migration trails were also detectable by scanning electron microscopy. Here, the fibrils were the prominent structures. The deposition of matrix was independent from the substratum: fibronectin was deposited on laminin, plain poly-lysine, basal lamina and even on fibronectin. Functional assays using anti-fibronectin or an antiserum to embryonic pigment epithelium basement membrane disturbed the formation of matrix fibrils, but did not inhibit cell attachment and translocation. Likewise, heparin in the culture medium only partially inhibited cell migration, despite the fact that it disturbed the formation of proper matrix fibrils. Our results suggest that the deposition of extracellular matrix by cells may not be mandatory for attachment and translocation. However, the deposition of matrix along defined trails might be important for the pathfinding of cells or nerve fibers that appear later in development.  相似文献   

14.
《The Journal of cell biology》1984,99(4):1486-1501
Monoclonal antibodies recognizing laminin, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, fibronectin, and two apparently novel connective tissue components have been used to examine the organization of extracellular matrix of skeletal muscle in vivo and in vitro. Four of the five monoclonal antibodies are described for the first time here. Immunocytochemical experiments with frozen-sectioned muscle demonstrated that both the heparan sulfate proteoglycan and laminin exhibited staining patterns identical to that expected for components of the basal lamina. In contrast, the remaining matrix constituents were detected in all regions of muscle connective tissue: the endomysium, perimysium, and epimysium. Embryonic muscle cells developing in culture elaborated an extracellular matrix, each antigen exhibiting a unique distribution. Of particular interest was the organization of extracellular matrix on myotubes: the build-up of matrix components was most apparent in plaques overlying clusters of an integral membrane protein, the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The heparan sulfate proteoglycan was concentrated at virtually all AChR clusters and showed a remarkable level of congruence with receptor organization; laminin was detected at 70-95% of AChR clusters but often was not completely co-distributed with AChR within the cluster; fibronectin and the two other extracellular matrix antigens occurred at approximately 20, 8, and 2% of the AChR clusters, respectively, and showed little or no congruence with AChR. From observations on the distribution of extracellular matrix components in tissue cultured fibroblasts and myogenic cells, several ideas about the organization of extracellular matrix are suggested. (a) Congruence between AChR clusters and heparan sulfate proteoglycan suggests the existence of some linkage between the two molecules, possibly important for regulation of AChR distribution within the muscle membrane. (b) The qualitatively different patterns of extracellular matrix organization over myotubes and fibroblasts suggest that each of these cell types uses somewhat different means to regulate the assembly of extracellular matrix components within its domain. (c) The limited co-distribution of different components within the extracellular matrix in vitro and the selective immune precipitation of each antigen from conditioned medium suggest that each extracellular matrix component is secreted in a form that is not complexed with other matrix constituents.  相似文献   

15.
Latent transforming growth factor-beta-binding proteins (LTBPs) are extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoproteins that play a major role in storage of latent TGF-beta in the ECM and regulate its availability. We have previously identified fibronectin as a key molecule for incorporation of LTBP1 and TGF-beta into the ECM of osteoblasts and fibroblasts. Here we provide evidence that heparan sulfate proteoglycans may mediate binding between LTBP1 and fibronectin. We have localized critical domains in the N terminus of LTBP1 that are required for co-localization with fibronectin in osteoblast cultures and have identified heparin binding sites in the N terminus of LTBP1 between residues 345 and 487. Solid-phase binding assays suggest that LTBP1 does not bind directly to fibronectin but that the binding is indirect. Heparin coupled to bovine serum albumin (heparin-BSA) was able to mediate binding between fibronectin and LTBP1. Treatment of primary osteoblast cultures with heparin or heparin-BSA but not with chondroitin sulfate impaired LTBP1 deposition onto fibronectin without inhibiting expression of LTBP1. Inhibition of LTBP1 incorporation was accompanied by reduced incorporation of latent TGF-beta into the ECM, with increased amounts of soluble latent TGF-beta. Inhibition of attachment of glycosaminoglycans to the core proteins of proteoglycans by beta-d-xylosides also reduced incorporation of LTBP1 into the ECM. These studies suggest that heparan sulfate proteoglycans may play a critical role in regulating TGF-beta availability by controlling the deposition of LTBP1 into the ECM in association with fibronectin.  相似文献   

16.
Syndecans are transmembrane proteoglycans expressed on adherent cells. They are a family of four proteins, which participate in cell-matrix adhesion, the regulation of growth factors (FGFs, VEGF, HGF) binding and signaling. The extracellular domain of syndecans contains heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains. Syndecans have transmembrane region and a short cytoplasmic domain. The cytoplasmic domain attaches activated protein kinase Calpha, phosphatidyl-inositol-4,5-bisphosphate, syntenin, beta-catenin and many others molecules. Syndecans bind numerous ligands, which are present in extracellular matrix: growth factors, enzymes, extracellular matrix molecules (fibronectin, laminin). They form connections with actin cytoskeleton. The changes in syndecan expression influence on cell adhesion and migration, structure of focal contacts and cytoskeleton. Syndecans participate in cell differentiation and tissue regeneration.  相似文献   

17.
Ovarian granulosa cells synthesize anticoagulant heparan sulfate proteoglycans (aHSPGs), which bind and activate antithrombin III. To determine if aHSPGs could contribute to the control of proteolytic activities involved in follicular development and ovulation, we studied the pattern of expression of these proteoglycans during the ovarian cycle. aHSPGs were localized on cells and tissues by (125)I-labeled antithrombin III binding followed by microscopic autoradiography. Localization of aHSPGs has shown that cultured granulosa cells, hormonally stimulated by gonadotropins to differentiate in vitro, up-regulate their synthesis and release of aHSPGS: In vivo, during gonadotropin-stimulated cycle, aHSPGs are present on granulosa cells of antral follicles and are strongly labeled in preovulatory follicles. These data demonstrate that aHSPG expression in the ovarian follicle is hormonally induced to culminate in preovulatory follicles. Moreover, we have shown that five heparan sulfate core proteins mRNA (perlecan; syndecan-1, -2, and -4; and glypican-1) are synthesized by granulosa cells, providing attachment for anticoagulant heparan sulfate chains on the cell surface and in the extracellular matrix. These core proteins are constantly expressed during the cycle, indicating that modulations of aHSPG levels observed in the ovary are likely controlled at the level of the biosynthesis of anticoagulant heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains. This expression pattern enables aHSPGs to focus serine protease inhibitors in the developing follicle to control proteolysis and fibrin formation at ovulation.  相似文献   

18.
We used antibodies raised against both a heparan sulfate proteoglycan purified from a mouse sarcoma and a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan purified from a rat yolk sac carcinoma to study the appearance and distribution of proteoglycans in cultured cells. Normal rat kidney cells displayed a fibrillar network of immunoreactive material at the cell surface when stained with antibodies to heparan sulfate proteoglycan, while virally transformed rat kidney cells lacked such a surface network. Antibodies to chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan revealed a punctate pattern on the surface of both cell types. The distribution of these two proteoglycans was compared to that of fibronectin by double-labeling immunofluorescent staining. The heparan sulfate proteoglycan was found to codistribute with fibronectin, and fibronectin and laminin gave coincidental stainings. The distribution of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan was not coincidental with that of fibronectin. Distinct fibers containing fibronectin but lacking chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan were observed. When the transformed cells were cultured in the presence of sodium butyrate, their morphology changed, and fibronectin, laminin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan appeared at the cell surface in a pattern resembling that of normal cells. These results suggest that fibronectin, laminin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan may be complexed at the cell surface. The proteoglycan may play a central role in assembly of such complexes since heparan sulfate has been shown to interact with both fibronectin and laminin.  相似文献   

19.
Dermal cells isolated from the back of 7-day chick embryos were cultured on homogeneous two-dimensional substrates consisting of one or two extracellular matrix components (type I, III or IV collagen, fibronectin and several glycosaminoglycans: hyaluronate, chondroitin-4, chondroitin-6, dermatan or heparan sulfate). The effect of these substrates on cell behavior was compared with that of culture dish polystyrene. Three parameters of cell behavior were examined: cell proliferation and patterning, spreading (cell surface) and locomotion (velocity and directionality). Data were collected by sequential microphotography and analyzed by computer assisted morphometry. Types I and III collagen, hyaluronate and heparan sulfate had a slowing down effect on cell proliferation and patterning. The inhibitory effect of type I collagen was also detected in mixtures with glycosaminoglycans. The other components had no effect. While the smallest spreading was observed on fibronectin substrate, the largest was recorded on chondroitin-6 sulfate and heparan sulfate. The slowest velocity of locomotion was measured on fibronectin, types I and IV collagen and a mixture of type I collagen and chondroitin-6 sulfate. The fastest speed was recorded on chondroitin-4 sulfate. These effects are discussed in view of our knowledge of the role of the dermis in the development of skin and cutaneous appendages, and in the light of the morphogenetically related microheterogeneous distribution of collagens, fibronectin and various glycosaminoglycans in the developing skin.  相似文献   

20.
Different biochemical and cytochemical techniques were applied to characterize the sites of localization of thrombospondin in cultured endothelial cells. The results obtained by [35S]methionine labeling, immunoblotting, immunoprecipitation, fluorescence microscopy, ultracytochemistry, immunogold labeling, and silver enhancement experiments revealed that thrombospondin secreted by endothelial cells is structurally organized together with proteoheparan sulfate in spherical granules at the cell surface. These granules are about 100 to 300 nm in size. Heparin or enzymatic degradation with heparitinase, but not with ABC lyase, release thrombospondin from the cell surface. Fibronectin is expressed in the extracellular matrix of endothelial cells in a fibrillar organization, clearly distinct from the punctate pattern of thrombospondin on the cell surface. Furthermore, secreted thrombospondin is highly enriched together with fibronectin and proteoheparan sulfate in cell attachment sites and in cell migration tracks. In cell migration tracks proteoheparan sulfate more clearly resembles the fibrillar distribution pattern of fibronectin, whereas thrombospondin reveals a rather monodisperse pattern. The obtained data suggest preferential sites of interaction between thrombospondin and heparan sulfate proteoglycans on the cell surface and a participation of thrombospondin in cell adhesion and cell migration.  相似文献   

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