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1.
The sulphur content as a measure of glycosaminoglycan content of growth plate cartilage was determined by energy dispersive x-ray analysis on fresh freeze dried unstained, unfixed ultra thin sections of rat growth plate. In the resting and proliferative zones, quantities of sulphur were found in the nuclei equal to that of the matrix. Less sulphur was present in the cytoplasm. In areas of cell degeneration nuclear and cytoplasmic content of sulphur fell to levels a fraction of that seen in the matrix. It was presumed that most of the sulphur was in glycosaminoglycans. Although glycosaminoglycans have been reported in small amounts in the nuclei of cells, no study of the glycosaminoglycan content of chondrocyte nuclei has been reported. The use of freeze dried unstained, unfixed sections presumably prevented the migration of sulphur and glycosaminoglycans from compartment to compartment.  相似文献   

2.
The sulphur content of chondrocyte nuclei   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary The sulphur content as a measure of glycosaminoglycan content of growth plate cartilage was determined by energy dispersive x-ray analysis on fresh freeze dried unstained, unfixed ultra thin sections of rat growth plate. In the resting and proliferative zones, quantities of sulphur were found in the nuclei equal to that of the matrix. Less sulphur was present in the cytoplasm. In areas of cell degeneration, nuclear and cytoplasmic content of sulphur fell to levels a fraction of that seen in the matrix. It was presumed that most of the sulphur was in glycosaminoglycans. Although glycosaminoglycans have been reported in small amounts in the nuclei of cells, no study of the glycosaminoglycan content of chondrocyte nuclei has been reported. The use of freeze dried unstained, unfixed sections presumably prevented the migration of sulphur and glycosaminoglycans from compartment to compartment.Supported by grants from the Medical Research Council and the Shriners of North America  相似文献   

3.
X-ray spectra were recorded from 400-700 nm matrix areas of 0.5 micron sections prepared from the articular cartilages of 15- and 23-year-old human cadavers. The X-ray microanalysis was carried out (i) on untreated material; (ii) after removing sulfate group by a methylation procedure; (iii) after staining with a copper containing cationic phatolcyanin dye, alcian blue 8GX, preceded by carboxymethylation. K alpha peaks of sulphur could be detected in methylated (i.e. desulfated) samples. These peaks probably indicated the presence of sulphur-containing amino acids in different matrix proteins. Consequently, the measurements of sulphur despite its general use cannot be recommended for the X-ray microanalysis of sulfated glycosaminoglycans of cartilage matrix. K alpha peaks of copper could be identified after carboxymethylation and staining with alcian blue. After carboxymethylation, alcian blue can only be bound to the dissociated sulfate groups of glycosaminoglycans in the cartilage matrix. According to our spectrophotometric studies, approximately one molecule of alcian blue combined with one sulfate group. These data suggested that this technique could be used for semiquantitative estimation of sulfated glycosaminoglycans in small areas of the cartilage matrix. Using this method, we found a higher occurrence of sulfated glycosaminoglycans in the territorial matrix than in the interterritorial matrix of the intermediate and deep zones of the human articular cartilage.  相似文献   

4.
The ultrastructure of endochondral bone was studied using an aqueous solution of chromic potassium sulphate as the decalcifying agent. 0.5 mm thick sections of rat tibiae were fixed in buffered glutaraldehyde, immersed in an aqueous solution of 1% chromic potassium sulphate pH 3.4, dehydrated and embedded in Poly Bed 812 without exposure to osmium tetroxide. In unstained sections we observed clusters of crystal like structures throughout the osteoid and calcifying cartilage matrix as well as solitary needle shaped structures in association with collagen fibrils. Stained sections revealed nuclei, endoplasmic reticulum, membrane limited dense granules, mitochondrial particles and other cell components typical of bone cells. It appeared that the chromic potassium sulphate method preserves the relationship between hard and soft tissues well, gives fine cytological detail and produces images of intracellular and extracellular deposits identical to untreated crystallites. It is concluded that the chromic potassium sulphate method is indicated for ultrastructural studies of bone.  相似文献   

5.
A method is described of measuring the tensile stiffness and fracture stress of human femoral condylar cartilage in planes parallel to and at increasing depth below the articular surface. The axis of tension was either parallel or perpendicular to the predominant collagen fibre direction in the superficial zone. Specimens were analysed for their collagen and glycosaminoglycan contents and partial correlation coefficients were determined between the tensile properties and each of the chemical constituents.The correlations between the tensile properties and the collagen content of specimens oriented parallel to the collagen fibre direction was statistically significant in the superficial zone but the significance level decreased with increasing depth. In specimens which were oriented perpendicularly to the collagen fibre direction the correlations between the above variables were less significant.There was no significant correlation between the tensile properties and the glycosaminoglycans in cartilage.Visibly normal specimens from the superficial layer which were situated adjacent to visibly degenerate cartilage were weaker and less stiff than specimens situated on normal joints or remote from visibly degenerate cartilage. Such differences decreased with depth below articular surface and were greater in parallel-oriented specimens.  相似文献   

6.
Epiphyses of the proximal tibiae of 7-week-old normal and homozygous recessive brachymorphic mice (bm/bm) were immunostained using a monoclonal antibody to basic fibroblast growth factor to determine its expression in growth plate cartilage, osteoblasts on the surfaces of the primary spongiosa and articular cartilage. In the normal growth plate, the immunoreactive factor was present in chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones but absent from lower hypertrophic chondrocytes. Immunostaining was present only in the territorial extracellular matrix immediately adjacent to the chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa stained heavily in normal mice. Strong staining was observed in intermediate zone articular chondrocytes. Cells in the superficial layer of articular cartilage were unstained. The extracellular matrix of the articular cartilage was completely free of immunostaining. In contrast, the reduced size of bm/bm growth plates was accompanied by significantly reduced staining intensity in proliferating and upper hypertrophic chondrocytes, and staining was absent from the territorial extracellular matrix of all zones of the bm/bm growth plate. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa of bm/bm mice stained less than those of normal mice. Articular cartilage chondrocytes in the intermediate zone stained with less intensity in bm/bm mice, and the cells of the superficial layer were unstained. The extracellular matrix of bm/bm articular cartilage was completely free of staining. Brachymorphic epiphyseal growth plate and articular chondrocytes, and osteoblasts in the primary spongiosa, express reduced amounts of immunoreactive fibroblast growth factor-2. This phenotypical characteristic may be associated with abnormal endochondral ossification and development of bone in brachymorphic mice  相似文献   

7.
Epiphyses of the proximal tibiae of 7-week-old normal and homozygous recessive brachymorphic mice (bm/bm) were immunostained using a monoclonal antibody to basic fibroblast growth factor to determine its expression in growth plate cartilage, osteoblasts on the surfaces of the primary spongiosa and articular cartilage. In the normal growth plate, the immunoreactive factor was present in chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones but absent from lower hypertrophic chondrocytes. Immunostaining was present only in the territorial extracellular matrix immediately adjacent to the chondrocytes of the proliferating and upper hypertrophic zones. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa stained heavily in normal mice. Strong staining was observed in intermediate zone articular chondrocytes. Cells in the superficial layer of articular cartilage were unstained. The extracellular matrix of the articular cartilage was completely free of immunostaining. In contrast, the reduced size of bm/bm growth plates was accompanied by significantly reduced staining intensity in proliferating and upper hypertrophic chondrocytes, and staining was absent from the territorial extracellular matrix of all zones of the bm/bm growth plate. Osteoblasts of the primary spongiosa of bm/bm mice stained less than those of normal mice. Articular cartilage chondrocytes in the intermediate zone stained with less intensity in bm/bm mice, and the cells of the superficial layer were unstained. The extracellular matrix of bm/bm articular cartilage was completely free of staining. Brachymorphic epiphyseal growth plate and articular chondrocytes, and osteoblasts in the primary spongiosa, express reduced amounts of immunoreactive fibroblast growth factor-2. This phenotypical characteristic may be associated with abnormal endochondral ossification and development of bone in brachymorphic mice  相似文献   

8.
After trauma, articular cartilage often does not heal due to incomplete bonding of the fractured surfaces. In this study we investigated the ability of chemical cross-linkers to facilitate bonding of articular cartilage, either alone or in combination with a pre-treatment with surface-degrading agents. Articular cartilage blocks were harvested from the femoropatellar groove of bovine calves. Two cartilage blocks, either after pre-treatment or without, were assembled in a custom-designed chamber in partial apposition and subjected to cross-linking treatment. Subsequently, bonding of cartilage was measured as adhesive strength, that is, the maximum force at rupture of bonded cartilage blocks divided by the overlap area. In a first approach, bonding was investigated after treatment with cross-linking reagents only, employing glutaraldehyde, 1-ethyl-3-diaminopropyl-carbodiimide (EDC)/N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS), genipin, or transglutaminase. Experiments were conducted with or without compression of the opposing surfaces. Compression during cross-linking strongly enhanced bonding, especially when applying EDC/NHS and glutaraldehyde. Therefore, all further experiments were performed under compressive conditions. Combinations of each of the four cross-linking agents with the degrading pre-treatments, pepsin, trypsin, and guanidine, led to distinct improvements in bonding compared to the use of cross-linkers alone. The highest values of adhesive strength were achieved employing combinations of pepsin or guanidine with EDC/NHS, and guanidine with glutaraldehyde. The release of extracellular matrix components, that is, glycosaminoglycans and total collagen, from cartilage blocks after pre-treatment was measured, but could not be directly correlated to the determined adhesive strength. Cytotoxicity was determined for all substances employed, that is, surface degrading agents and cross-linkers, using the resazurin assay. Taking the favourable cell vitality after treatment with pepsin and EDC/NHS and the cytotoxic effects of guanidine and glutaraldehyde into account, the combination of pepsin and EDC/NHS appeared to be the most advantageous treatment in this study. In conclusion, bonding of articular cartilage blocks was achieved by chemical fixation of their surface components using cross-linking reagents. Application of compressive forces and prior modulation of surface structures enhanced cartilage bonding significantly. Enzymatic treatment in combination with cross-linkers may represent a promising addition to current techniques for articular cartilage repair.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Staining of articular cartilage by the periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) method was measured using microspectrophotometry. Standard PAS technique with 2 h oxidation produced a distinct Schiff reaction in the cartilage sections. The staining increased with depth of the articular cartilage demonstrating distribution of the glycoproteins. The modified PAS method included a second, longer periodic acid treatment, which made the uronic acid of glycosaminoglycans PAS-positive. The modified PAS method proved to be highly specific for chondroitin sulphate, which was determined from the samples with gas chromatography. A statistically significant correlation between the Schiff reactivity and galactosamine content of the sections was observed. It is concluded that for articular cartilage standard and modified PAS methods are useful procedures for demonstrating local changes of glycoproteins and chondroitin sulphate, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
传统光学相干断层成像可实现无损伤在体检测,具有较高的分辨率和灵敏度。获取生物组织的双折射信息可望是其应用之一。本文用传统光学相干断层成像系统以动物模型对关节软骨进行了研究,对软骨组织的传统光学相干断层图像的层结构随脱水和机械作用的变化进行了分析。结果表明,传统光学相干断层成像系统在一定程度上可用于监测由其胶原质纤维排列决定的软骨组织的双折射和密度。  相似文献   

11.
Chondroadherin is a cell binding, leucine-rich repeat protein found in the territorial matrix of articular cartilage. Several members of the leucine-rich repeat protein family present in the extracellular matrix of e.g. cartilage have been shown to interact with collagen and influence collagen fibrillogenesis. We show that complexes of monomeric collagen type II and chondroadherin can be released under non-denaturing conditions from articular cartilage treated with p-aminophenylmercuric acetate to activate resident matrix metalloproteinases. Purified complexes as well as complexes formed in vitro between recombinant chondroadherin and collagen type II were studied by electron microscopy. Chondroadherin was shown to bind to two sites on collagen type II. The interaction was characterized by surface plasmon resonance analysis showing K(D) values in the nanomolar range. Both chondroadherin and collagen interact with chondrocytes, partly via the same receptor, but give rise to different cellular responses. By also interacting with each other, a complex system is created which may be of functional importance for the communication between the cells and its surrounding matrix and/or in the regulation of collagen fibril assembly.  相似文献   

12.
Despite the fact that type III collagen is the second most abundant collagen type in the body, its contribution to the physiologic maintenance and repair of skeletal tissues remains poorly understood. This study queried the role of type III collagen in the structure and biomechanical functions of two structurally distinctive tissues in the knee joint, type II collagen-rich articular cartilage and type I collagen-dominated meniscus. Integrating outcomes from atomic force microscopy-based nanomechanical tests, collagen fibril nanostructural analysis, collagen cross-link analysis and histology, we elucidated the impact of type III collagen haplodeficiency on the morphology, nanostructure and biomechanical properties of articular cartilage and meniscus in Col3a1+/− mice. Reduction of type III collagen leads to increased heterogeneity and mean thickness of collagen fibril diameter, as well as reduced modulus in both tissues, and these effects became more pronounced with skeletal maturation. These data suggest a crucial role of type III collagen in mediating fibril assembly and biomechanical functions of both articular cartilage and meniscus during post-natal growth. In articular cartilage, type III collagen has a marked contribution to the micromechanics of the pericellular matrix, indicating a potential role in mediating the early stage of type II collagen fibrillogenesis and chondrocyte mechanotransduction. In both tissues, reduction of type III collagen leads to decrease in tissue modulus despite the increase in collagen cross-linking. This suggests that the disruption of matrix structure due to type III collagen deficiency outweighs the stiffening of collagen fibrils by increased cross-linking, leading to a net negative impact on tissue modulus. Collectively, this study is the first to highlight the crucial structural role of type III collagen in both articular cartilage and meniscus extracellular matrices. We expect these results to expand our understanding of type III collagen across various tissue types, and to uncover critical molecular components of the microniche for regenerative strategies targeting articular cartilage and meniscus repair.  相似文献   

13.
Diastrophic dysplasia (DTD) is an incurable recessive chondrodysplasia caused by mutations in the SLC26A2 transporter responsible for sulfate uptake by chondrocytes. The mutations cause undersulfation of glycosaminoglycans in cartilage. Studies of dtd mice with a knock-in Slc26a2 mutation showed an unusual progression of the disorder: net undersulfation is mild and normalizing with age, but the articular cartilage degrades with age and bones develop abnormally. To understand underlying mechanisms, we studied newborn dtd mice. We developed, verified and used high-definition infrared hyperspectral imaging of cartilage sections at physiological conditions, to quantify collagen and its orientation, noncollagenous proteins, and chondroitin chains, and their sulfation with 6-μm spatial resolution and without labeling. We found that chondroitin sulfation across the proximal femur cartilage varied dramatically in dtd, but not in the wild type. Corresponding undersulfation of dtd was mild in most regions, but strong in narrow articular and growth plate regions crucial for bone development. This undersulfation correlated with the chondroitin synthesis rate measured via radioactive sulfate incorporation, explaining the sulfation normalization with age. Collagen orientation was reduced, and the reduction correlated with chondroitin undersulfation. Such disorientation involved the layer of collagen covering the articular surface and protecting cartilage from degradation. Malformation of this layer may contribute to the degradation progression with age and to collagen and proteoglycan depletion from the articular region, which we observed in mice already at birth. The results provide clues to in vivo sulfation, DTD treatment, and cartilage growth.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The distribution of type II and VI collagen was immunocytochemically investigated in bovine articular and nasal cartilage. Cartilage explants were used either fresh or cultured for up to 4 weeks with or without interleukin 1α (IL-1α). Sections of the explants were incubated with antibodies for both types of collagen. Microscopic analyses revealed that type II collagen was preferentially localized in the interchondron matrix whereas type VI collagen was primarily found in the direct vicinity of the chondrocytes. Treatment of the sections with hyaluronidase greatly enhanced the signal for both types of collagen. Also in sections of explants cultured with IL-1α a higher level of labeling of the collagens was found. This was apparent without any pre-treatment with hyaluronidase. Under the influence of IL-1α the area positive for type VI collagen that surrounded the chondrocytes broadened. Although the two collagens in both types of cartilage were distributed similarly, a remarkable difference was the higher degree of staining of type VI collagen in articular cartilage. Concomitantly we noted that digestion of this type of cartilage hardly occurred in the presence of IL-1α whereas nasal cartilage was almost completely degraded within 18 days of culture. Since type VI collagen is known to be relatively resistant to proteolysis we speculate that the higher level of type VI collagen in articular cartilage is important in protecting cartilage from digestion.  相似文献   

16.
The ultrastructure of the extracellular matrix of chick limb buds at stages 24--36 was investigated with the electron microscope and with polarization microscopic evaluation of topo-optical reactions. Two types of extracellular matrix structures could be distinguished. In the primary matrix of presumptive cartilaginous areas at developmental stage 25, topo-optical reactions revealed polycarboxylated glycosaminoglycans oriented parallel to the cell surface. With the electron microscope few fine filaments and small matrix granules could be found. In the secondary cartilage matrix, from stage 26 on, topo-optical reactions demonstrated glycosaminoglycans and collagen being predominantly ordered parallel to each other. Their amount and the degree of their orientation gradually increased during the developmental period investigated. Electron microscopy demonstrated collagen filaments and matrix granules in increasing number at stages 26--36. While some parallel ordering of filaments was seen in the electron micrographs, no sign of spatial ordering of glycosaminoglycans could be found with this technique.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Chondrocytes, each with their pericellular matrix bounded by a fibrous capsule, can be extracted singly or in groups from both mature pig articular cartilage and chondrosarcoma tissue. These structures, termed chondrons, are thought to anchor the chondrocytes in the matrix and protect them from the compressive forces experienced when articular cartilage is under load. The capsule of these chondrons contains both type II and type IX collagens and is composed of fine fibrillar material, unlike the large banded fibres of type II collagen found in the rest of the matrix. This suggests a rote for type IX collagen in regulating the diameter of type II fibres to produce the fine fibrillar structure of the chondron capsules.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Selected commonly used cationic dyes, viz. Thionin, Safranin O, Toluidine Blue O, Dimethylmethylene Blue, Cuprolinic Blue, Cupromeronic Blue,N, N-Diethylpseudoisocyanine, and a modified PAS-method, and staining method, with a variety of alternative procedures, e.g., variation of pH, use of the critical electrolyte concentration method, and blocking reactions (methylation-saponification, carboxymethylation), were tested to select optimal staining procedures for the semiquantitative histochemical estimation of glycosaminoglycans by microspectrophotometry in sections of articular cartilage. The methods were carried out on 3 m-thick paraffin and 1 m-thick glycolmethacrylate sections of bovine articular cartilage. The staining intensity of the sections was measured from spots 25 m apart using a leitz MPV 3 microspectrophotometer, starting at the surface of the cartilage and ending up at the tidemark. The result was compared with the fixed-charge density graph determined from the adjacent articular cartilage.Of the dyes tested, Thionin and Safranin O proved to be excellent cationic dyes for the histochemical quantification of cartilage matrix proteoglycans, since the staining intensity curves showed a linear correlation (r=0.900–0.995) with the fixed charge density curves from the adjacent cartilage. Also, the stain distribution was consistently uniform across the sections. In 1 m-thick glycolmethacrylate sections, the Safranin O staining gradient showed almost perfect identity with the fixed-charge density curve. Cuprolinic Blue and Cupromeronic Blue combined with the critical electrolyte concentration technique were also useful for the microspectrophotometric assays of glycosaminoglycans, but the presence of metachromasia should be checked prior to the measurements. The reliability of blocking procedures for quantitative histochemical work was not convincing.  相似文献   

19.
Utilizing ATDC5 murine chondrogenic cells and human articular chondrocytes, this study sought to develop facile, reproducible three-dimensional models of cartilage generation with the application of tissue engineering strategies, involving biodegradable poly(glycolic acid) scaffolds and rotating wall bioreactors, and micromass pellet cultures. Chondrogenic differentiation, assessed by histology, immunohistochemistry, and gene expression analysis, in ATDC5 and articular chondrocyte pellets was evident by the presence of distinct chondrocytes, expressing Sox-9, aggrecan, and type II collagen, in lacunae embedded in a cartilaginous matrix of type II collagen and proteoglycans. Tissue engineered explants of ATDC5 cells were reminiscent of cartilaginous structures composed of numerous chondrocytes, staining for typical chondrocytic proteins, in lacunae embedded in a matrix of type II collagen and proteoglycans. In comparison, articular chondrocyte explants exhibited areas of Sox-9, aggrecan, and type II collagen-expressing cells growing on fleece, and discrete islands of chondrocytic cells embedded in a cartilaginous matrix.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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