首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Summary Electron microscopy (EM) has greatly helped to elucidate our understanding of bacterial structure and function. However, several recent studies have cautioned investigators about artifacts that result from the use of conventional EM preparation procedures. To avoid these problems, the use of low temperature scanning electron microscopy (LTSEM) was evaluated for examining frozen, fully hydrated specimens. Spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea L. cv. New Jersey), which were naturally infected or inoculated with bacteria, were used as the experimental material. 1 cm segments of the infected leaves were plunge frozen in liquid nitrogen, transferred to a cryochamber for sputter coating and then moved onto a cryostage in an SEM. After observation, some of the frozen, hydrated leaf segments were transferred onto agar medium to determine whether preparation for LTSEM was nondestructive to the bacteria. The other tissue segments were chemically fixed by freeze-substitution. The results indicated that after cryopreparation and observation in the LTSEM: (i) viable bacteria, which were recovered from the leaf sample, could be cultured on agar medium for subsequent study, and (ii) the frozen samples could be freeze substituted and embedded so that transmission electron microscopic (TEM) observations could be carried out on the same specimen. In conclusion, frozen, hydrated leaf tissue infected with bacteria can be observed using LTSEM and then can be either processed for TEM observation to obtain further structural details or recovered to culture the pathogenic bacteria for supplementary studies.Abbreviations EPS extracellular polysaccharide - EM electron microscopy - LTSEM low temperature scanning electron microscopy - SEM scanning electron microscopy - TEM transmission electron microscopy - TSA tryptic soy agar - TSB tryptic soy broth Dedicated to Professor Eldon H. Newcomb in recognition of his contributions to cell biology  相似文献   

2.
When mouse mammary epithelial cells are cultured on a plastic substratum, no basal lamina forms. When cultured on a type I collagen gel, the rate of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis is unchanged, but the rate of GAG degradation is markedly reduced and a GAG-rich, basal lamina-like structure accumulates. This effect of collagen was investigated by comparing the culture distribution, nature, and metabolic stability of the 35S-GAG-containing molecules produced by cells on plastic and collagen. During 48 h of labeling with 35SO4, cultures on collagen accumulate 1.4-fold more 35S-GAG per microgram of DNA. In these cultures, most of the extracellular 35S-GAG is immobilized with the lamina and collagen gel, whereas in cultures on plastic all extracellular 35S-GAG is soluble. On both substrata, the cells produce several heparan sulfate-rich 35S-proteoglycan fractions that are distinct by Sepharose CL-4B chromatography. The culture types contain similar amounts of each fraction, except that collagen cultures contain nearly four times more of a fraction that is found largely bound to the lamina and collagen gel. During a chase this proteoglycan fraction is stable in cultures on collagen, but is extensively degraded in cultures on plastic. Thus, collagen-induced formation of a basal lamina correlates with reduced degradation and enhanced accumulation of a specific heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycan fraction. Immobilization and stabilization of basal laminar proteoglycan(s) by interstitial collagen may be a physiological mechanism of basal lamina maintenance and assembly.  相似文献   

3.
The use of techniques such as low temperature scanning electron microscopy (LTSEM) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) allows the study of lichen thalli in different states of hydration and also near the natural state. The spatial organization of desiccated thalli, with reduced, very compact algal layers, is different from that of hydrated ones. Sometimes, the observation with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of photobiont pyrenoids from desiccated thalli reports pyrenoids with a central part of a weak stained matrix lacking pyrenoglobuli, named "empty zones". "Empty zones" are not distinguishable with LTSEM and do not present immunolabelling with rubisco antibody in TEM. These zones could be originated by an expansion process during rehydration produced in chemical fixation.  相似文献   

4.
Neural crest cells migrate extensively through a complex extracellular matrix (ECM) to sites of terminal differentiation. To determine what role the various components of the ECM may play in crest morphogenesis, quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica) neural crest cells have been cultured in three-dimensional hydrated collagen lattices containing various combinations of macromolecules known to be present in the crest migratory pathways. Neural crest cells migrate readily in native collagen gels whereas the cells are unable to use denatured collagen as a migratory substratum. The speed of movement decreases linearly as the concentration of collagen in the gel increases. Speed of movement of crest cells is stimulated in gels containing 10% fetal calf serum and chick embryo extract, 33 micrograms/ml fibronectin cell-binding fragments, 3 mg/ml chondroitin sulfate, or 3 mg/ml chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan when compared to rates of movement through collagen lattices alone. Low concentrations of hyaluronate (250-500 micrograms/ml) in a 750 micrograms/ml collagen gel do not alter rates of movement over collagen alone, but higher concentrations (4 mg/ml) greatly inhibit migration. Conversely, hyaluronate (250 micrograms/ml) significantly increases speed of movement if the crest cells are cultured in high concentration collagen gels (2.5 mg/ml), suggesting that hyaluronate is expanding spaces and consequently enhancing migration. The morphology and mode of movement of neural crest cells vary with the matrix in which they are grown and can be correlated with their speed of movement. Light and scanning electron microscopy reveal rounded, blebbing cells in matrices associated with slower translocation, whereas rounded cells with branching filopodia or lamellipodia are associated with rapid translocation. Bipolar cells with long processes are observed in cultures of rapidly moving cells that appear to be adhering strongly, as well as in cultures of cells that are stationary for long periods. These data, considered with the known distribution of macromolecules in the early embryo, suggest the following: (1) Both collagen and fibronectin can act as preferred substrata for migration. (2) Chondroitin sulfate and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan increase speed of movement, but probably do so by decreasing adhesiveness and thereby producing more frequent detachment. In the embryo, crest cells would most likely avoid regions containing high concentrations of chondroitin sulfate. (3) Hyaluronate cannot act as a substratum for migration, but in low concentrations it can open spaces in the matrix and consequently may stimulate movement. The complex interactions of combined matr  相似文献   

5.
6.
Understanding the changes in collagen and proteoglycan content of cartilage due to physical forces is necessary for progress in treating joint disorders, including those due to overuse. Physical forces in the chondrocyte environment can affect the cellular processes involved in the biosynthesis of extracellular matrix. In turn, the biomechanical properties of cartilage depend on its collagen and proteoglycan content. To understand changes due to physical forces, this study examined the effect of 80 cumulative hours of in vivo cyclical joint loading on the cartilage content of proteoglycan and collagen in the rabbit metacarpophalangeal joint. The forepaw digits of six anesthetized New Zealand White adult female rabbits were repetitively flexed at 1 Hz with an estimated joint contact pressure of 1 to 2 MPa. Joints were collected from loaded and contralateral control specimens, fixed, decalcified, embedded, and thin-sectioned. Sections were examined under polarized light microscopy to identify and measure superficial and mid zone thicknesses of cartilage. Fourier Transform Infrared microspectroscopy was used to measure proteoglycan and collagen contents in the superficial, mid, and deep zones. Loading led to an increase in proteoglycan in the cartilage of all six rabbits. Specifically, there was a 46% increase in the cartilage deep zone (p = 0.003). The collagen content did not change with loading. Joint loading did not change the superficial and mid zone mean thicknesses. We conclude that long-term (80 cumulative hours) cyclical in vivo joint loading stimulates proteoglycan synthesis. Furthermore, stimulation is localized to cartilage regions of high hydrostatic pressure. These data may be useful in developing interventions to prevent overuse injuries or in developing therapies to improve joint function.  相似文献   

7.
In our recent studies, we have demonstrated that monolayer cultures of bovine aortic endothelial (BAE) cells that do not express type I collagen also fail to express and synthesize decorin, a small chondroitin/dermatan sulfate proteoglycan that interacts with type I collagen and regulates collagen fibrillogenesis in vitro. However, BAE cells exhibiting a spontaneous sprouting phenotype and a predisposition toward the formation of cords and tube-like structures (an in vitro model for angiogenesis) initiate the synthesis of type I collagen during their morphological transition from a polygonal monolayer to an angiogenic phenotype. In the present study, we examined whether BAE cells also initiate the synthesis of the proteoglycan decorin during this morphological transition. We show by Northern blot analysis and by immunochemical methods that BAE cell cultures containing sprouting cells and cords, but not monolayer cultures of these cells, express and synthesize decorin (M(r) approximately 100,000). We also show that type I collagen expression by BAE cell cultures is initiated concomitantly. However, the localization of decorin and type I collagen in cord and tube-forming BAE cell cultures is not completely identical. Type I collagen is detected only in sprouting BAE cells and in endothelial cords, whereas decorin is also apparent in BAE cells surrounding the cords and tubes. Our results indicate that the synthesis of decorin as well as type I collagen is associated with endothelial cord and tube formation in vitro.  相似文献   

8.
Monolayer cell cultures and cartilage tissue fragments have been used to examine the effects of hydrostatic fluid pressure (HFP) on the anabolic and catabolic functions of chondrocytes. In this study, bovine articular chondrocytes (bACs) were grown in porous three-dimensional (3-D) collagen sponges, to which constant or cyclic (0.015 Hz) HFP was applied at 2.8 MPa for up to 15 days. The effects of HFP were evaluated histologically, immunohistochemically, and by quantitative biochemical measures. Metachromatic matrix accumulated around the cells within the collagen sponges during the culture period. There was intense intracellular, pericellular, and extracellular immunoreactivity for collagen type II throughout the sponges in all groups. The incorporation of [(35)S]-sulfate into glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) was 1.3-fold greater with constant HFP and 1.4-fold greater with cyclic HFP than in the control at day 5 (P < 0.05). At day 15, the accumulation of sulfated-GAG was 3.1-fold greater with constant HFP and 2.7-fold with cyclic HFP than the control (0.01). Quantitative immunochemical analysis of the matrix showed significantly greater accumulation of chondroitin 4-sulfate proteoglycan (C 4-S PG), keratan sulfate proteoglycan (KS PG), and chondroitin proteoglycan (chondroitin PG) than the control (P < 0.01). With this novel HFP culture system, 2.8 MPa HFP stimulated synthesis of cartilage-specific matrix components in chondrocytes cultured in porous 3-D collagen sponges.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Human foreskin fibroblasts were used to reorganize hydrated collagen gels into a dermal-like matrix, after which freshly isolated keratinocytes isolated from rabbit ear skin were placed on the surfaces of the matrices and cultured for up to 12 days. Transmission electron microscopy revealed 8–12 cell layers of epidermal cells organized in three distinct strata. The basal stratum consisted of cuboidal to columnar cells with typical complement of organelles, oval nuclei, and prominent tonofilaments inserting into desmosomes. Mitotic cells often were found at this level. There was no well-defined basement membrane region; rather, many of the cells appeared to be in close contact with collagen fibrils. The intermediate stratum of suprabasal cells consisted of elongated cells that had reduced organelles, but still were connected to each other by desmosomes. Finally, the superficial stratum of suprabasal cells contained cells that were completely flattened and often appeared to be sloughing off the apical surfaces of the cultures. Indirect immunofluorescence studies carried out on frozen sections revealed bullous pemphigoid antigen associated with basal epidermal cells; pemphigus vulgaris antigen around the epidermal cells of all strata, and keratin present in the epidermal cells of all strata. Filaggrin was observed in punctate and fibrillar arrangements in suprabasal cells. Fibronectin was found in a linear deposit at the dermal-epidermal junction and around the fibroblasts in the reorganized collagen gels. Type-IV collagen and laminin, however, were not detected.  相似文献   

10.
K Elima  E Vuorio 《FEBS letters》1989,258(2):195-198
Cell cultures were initiated from epiphyseal cartilages, diaphyseal periosteum, and muscle of 16-week human fetuses. Total RNAs isolated from these cultures were analyzed for the levels of mRNAs for major fibrillar collagens, two proteoglycan core proteins and osteonectin. In standard monolayer cultures the differentiated chondrocyte phenotype was replaced by a dedifferentiated one: the mRNA levels of cartilage-specific type II collagen decreased upon subculturing, while those of types I and III collagen, and the core proteins increased. When the cells were transferred to grow in agarose, redifferentiation (reappearance of type II collagen mRNA) occurred. Fibroblasts grown from periosteum and muscle were found to contain mRNAs for types I and III collagen and proteoglycan cores. When these cells were transferred to agarose they acquired a shape indistinguishable from chondrocytes, but no type II collagen mRNA was observed.  相似文献   

11.
We have examined whether the production of hypertrophic cartilage matrix reflecting a late stage in the development of chondrocytes which participate in endochondral bone formation, is the result of cell lineage, environmental influence, or both. We have compared the ability of cultured limb mesenchyme and mesectoderm to synthesize type X collagen, a marker highly selective for hypertrophic cartilage. High density cultures of limb mesenchyme from stage 23 and 24 chick embryos contain many cells that react positively for type II collagen by immunohistochemistry, but only a few of these initiate type X collagen synthesis. When limb mesenchyme cells are cultured in or on hydrated collagen gels or in agarose (conditions previously shown to promote chondrogenesis in low density cultures), almost all initiate synthesis of both collagen types. Similarly, collagen gel cultures of limb mesenchyme from stage 17 embryos synthesize type II collagen and with some additional delay type X collagen. However, cytochalasin D treatment of subconfluent cultures on plastic substrates, another treatment known to promote chondrogenesis, induces the production of type II collagen, but not type X collagen. These results demonstrate that the appearance of type X collagen in limb cartilage is environmentally regulated. Mesectodermal cells from the maxillary process of stages 24 and 28 chick embryos were cultured in or on hydrated collagen gels. Such cells initiate synthesis of type II collagen, and eventually type X collagen. Some cells contain only type II collagen and some contain both types II and X collagen. On the other hand, cultures of mandibular processes from stage 29 embryos contain chondrocytes with both collagen types and a larger overall number of chondrogenic foci than the maxillary process cultures. Since the maxillary process does not produce cartilage in situ and the mandibular process forms Meckel's cartilage which does not hypertrophy in situ, environmental influences, probably inhibitory in nature, must regulate chondrogenesis in mesectodermal derivatives. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The effect of glucocorticoids on sulfated proteoglycan synthesis by rabbit costal chondrocyte cultures exposed to serum-free conditions has been examined. Low density cultures of rabbit costal chondrocytes were maintained on dishes coated with extracellular matrix produced by bovine corneal endothelial cells and exposed to a 9:1 mixture (v/v) of Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium and Ham's F-12 medium supplemented with transferrin, high density lipoproteins, fibroblast growth factor, and insulin (Medium A). Chondrocytes maintained in the presence of Medium A supplemented with 10(-7) M hydrocortisone reorganized, at confluence, into a homogeneous cartilage-like tissue composed of round cells surrounded by a refractile matrix in which abundant thin collagen fibrils characteristic of type II collagen were observed. The cell ultrastructure and fibrils of the pericellular matrix were similar to those seen in vivo. In contrast, cells maintained in the presence of Medium A alone, once they reached confluence, formed a fibroblastic multilayer and produced thick collagen bundles. The level of 35SO4(2-) incorporated into large cartilage-specific proteoglycans in glucocorticoid-supplemented cultures was 33-fold higher than that of glucocorticoid-free cultures. The level of 35SO4(2-) incorporated into small ubiquitous proteoglycans was only 4-fold higher than that of glucocorticoid-free cultures. On the other hand, the level of [3H]glucosamine incorporated into hyaluronate in glucocorticoid-supplemented cultures was 4.5-fold lower than that of glucocorticoid-free cultures. Within 24 h of their addition to confluent cultures, hydrocortisone or dexamethasone markedly stimulated proteoglycan synthesis. This effect was not mimicked by androgens, estrogens, progesterone, or an inactive form of glucocorticoids such as deoxycorticosterone. This suggests that glucocorticoids have a direct and specific stimulatory effect on cartilage-specific proteoglycan synthesis and are essential for the maintenance of this synthesis in low density chondrocyte cultures.  相似文献   

13.
Fluoroquinolone antibiotics have been used widely in humans and domestic animals, including horses, because of their broad-spectrum bactericidal activity, and relative safety. The use of fluoroquinolones, however, is not without risk. Tendonitis and spontaneous tendon rupture have been reported in people during or following therapy with fluoroquinolones. We have studied the effects of enrofloxacin, a fluoroquinolone antibiotic used commonly in domestic animals, on tendon cell cultures established from equine superficial digital flexor tendons. Effects on cell proliferation and morphology were studied using cell counting and scanning electron microscopy. Monosaccharide content and composition was determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. Western and Northern blot analyses were utilized to evaluate the synthesis and expression of two proteoglycans, biglycan and decorin. Our data demonstrate that enrofloxacin inhibits cell proliferation, induces morphological changes, decreases total monosacharide content and alters small proteoglycan synthesis at the glycosylation level in equine tendon cell cultures. These effects are more pronounced in juvenile tendon cells than in adult equine tendon cells. We hypothesize that morphological changes and inhibition of cell proliferation are a result of impaired production of biglycan and decorin, proteoglycans involved in fibrillogenesis of collagen, the most important structural component of the tendon of enrofloxacin-treated tendon cells. Our findings suggest that fluoroquinolones should be used with caution in horses, especially in foals.  相似文献   

14.
Cell culture in collagen lattice is known to be a more physiological model than monolayer for studying the regulation of extracellular matrix protein deposition. The synthesis of sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAG) and dermatan sulfate (DS) proteoglycans by 3 cell strains were studied in confluent monolayers grown on plastic surface, in comparison to fully retracted collagen lattices. Cells were labelled with35S-sulfate, followed by GAG and proteoglycan analysis by cellulose acetate and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, respectively. The 3 cell strains contracted the lattice in a similar way. In monolayer cultures, the major part of GAG was secreted into culture medium whereas in lattice cultures of dermal fibroblasts and osteosarcoma MG-63 cells but not fibrosarcoma HT-1080 cells, a higher proportion of GAGs, including dermatan sulfate, was retained within the lattices. Small DS proteoglycans, decorin and biglycan, were detected in fibroblasts and MG-63 cultures. They were preferentially trapped within the collagen gel. In retracted lattices, decorin had a higher Mr than in monolayer. Biglycan was detected in monolayer and lattice cultures of MG-63 cells but in lattice cultures only in the case of fibroblasts. In this last case, an up regulation of biglycan mRNA steady state level and down regulation of decorin mRNA was observed, in comparison to monolayers, indicating that collagen can modulate the phenotypical expression of small proteoglycan genes.Supported by a fellowship from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique  相似文献   

15.
The morphology of head cartilage of the cephalopods Sepia officinalis and Octopus vulgaris has been studied on samples fixed and embedded for light- and electron microscopy and on fresh frozen sections viewed by polarizing microscopy. The organization of extracellular matrix (ECM) varies in different regions of the head cartilage. Superficial zones are made up of densely packed collagenous laminae parallel to the cartilage surface, while radially arranged laminae form a deeper zone where territorial and interterritorial areas are present. A compact arrangement of banded collagen fibrils (10-25 nm in diameter) forms the laminae of the superficial zones and of the interterritorial areas; a loose three-dimensional network of fibrils (10-20 nm) with many proteoglycan aggregates forms the territorial areas. A pericellular matrix surrounds the bodies of extremely branched territorial chondrocytes. Peculiar anchoring devices (ADs) are dispersed with variable orientation within the ECM. A perichondrium is present, but often connectival and muscular bundles are fused with the superficial layers of cartilage. Some vessels were also observed within the superficial inner zone and clusters of hemocyanin molecules were demonstrated both in the ECM and in some cells. The cephalopod head cartilage seems to share some morphological characteristics with both hyaline cartilage and bone tissue of vertebrates.  相似文献   

16.
Biofilms of Streptococcus crista CR3 were generated on hydroxyapatite (HA) discs for 20 h in a continuous flow system with brain heart infusion broth dripped over the disc at a rate of 6 ml h-1. This study compares the conventional scanning electron microscope (SEM) preparation techniques, of critical point drying and freeze-drying, with low temperature SEM (LTSEM) and Electroscan generated images of hydrated biofilms, which preserve the integrity of hydrated polymers.
Critical point drying and freeze-drying caused almost complete disappearance of the matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). Critical point drying, however, showed evenly spaced single or paired cocci remaining on the HA disc whereas freeze-drying caused the biofilm to detach from the HA leaving only patchy clumps of cells visible. By comparison LTSEM preserved the EPS better than critical point drying and freeze-drying, but holes were seen in the top and side of the biofilm and the EPS did show some shrinkage artefacts. An untreated wet biofilm viewed in the Electroscan showed an intact, hydrated, smooth matrix of EPS with cell shapes only visible indistinctly in a canopy of moist EPS. No holes were visible and no shrinkage artefacts were evident. Therefore, Electroscan imaging of the biofilm was the only method that preserved the integrity of the matrix with no apparent shrinkage artefacts.  相似文献   

17.
Binding of fibronectins (FN) to collagen types I-IV were studied using polyclonal antibodies against human and chicken FNs, proteoglycan monomers, collagen type II and monoclonal antibodies reacting with both soluble and insoluble forms of human FN. Plasma fibronectin and type II collagen were shown to interact specifically in a homologous system. Type II collagen, however, proved to be less effective in inhibition assays compared to other types of collagen. In high density cultures of chicken limb bud cells, fibronectin was first localized within the fibroblast-like cells of 4 hr cultures and an extensive extracellular filamentous network developed by the end of day 1. Fibronectin was present in the newly formed cartilage nodules although it seemed to disappear by day 6, when the proteoglycan accumulation became more intensive. Enzyme treatments (testicular hyaluronidase, chondroitinase ABC) helped to localize FN at this stage of development of chicken cartilage, in microdroplet high density cultures of human fetal chondrocytes and in articular cartilage. Fibronectin was localized only in the pericellular ring of intact human articular cartilage using monoclonal antibodies with the biotin-avidin system.  相似文献   

18.
Collagen degradation is one of the early signs of osteoarthritis. It is not known how collagen degradation affects chondrocyte volume and morphology. Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of enzymatically induced collagen degradation on cell volume and shape changes in articular cartilage after a hypotonic challenge. Confocal laser scanning microscopy was used for imaging superficial zone chondrocytes in intact and degraded cartilage exposed to a hypotonic challenge. Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy, polarized light microscopy, and mechanical testing were used to quantify differences in proteoglycan and collagen content, collagen orientation, and biomechanical properties, respectively, between the intact and degraded cartilage. Collagen content decreased and collagen orientation angle increased significantly (p < 0.05) in the superficial zone cartilage after collagenase treatment, and the instantaneous modulus of the samples was reduced significantly (p < 0.05). Normalized cell volume and height 20 min after the osmotic challenge (with respect to the original volume and height) were significantly (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01, respectively) larger in the intact compared to the degraded cartilage. These findings suggest that the mechanical environment of chondrocytes, specifically collagen content and orientation, affects cell volume and shape changes in the superficial zone articular cartilage when exposed to osmotic loading. This emphasizes the role of collagen in modulating cartilage mechanobiology in diseased tissue.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Binding of fibronectins (FN) to collagen types I–IV were studied using polyclonal antibodies against human and chicken FNs, proteoglycan monomers, collagen type II and monoclonal antibodies reacting with both soluble and insoluble forms of human FN. Plasma fibronectin and type II collagen were shown to interact specifically in a homologous system. Type II collagen, however, proved to be less effective in inhibition assays compared to other types of collagen.In high density cultures of chicken limb bud cells, fibronectin was first localized within the fibroblast-like cells of 4 hr cultures and an extensive extracellular filamentous net-work developed by the end of day 1. Fibronectin was present in the newly formed cartilage nodules although it seemed to disappear by day 6, when the proteoglycan accumulation became more intensive. Enzyme treatments (testicular hyaluronidase, chondroitinase ABC) helped to localize FN at this stage of development of chicken cartilage, in microdroplet high density cultures of human fetal chondrocytes and in articular cartilage. Fibronectin was localized only in the pericellular ring of intact human articular cartilage using monoclonal antibodies with the biotin-avidin system.Please send offprint request to: Dr. Tibor T. Glant (until April Joint Diseases Laboratory, Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children, 1529 Cedar Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3G 1A6  相似文献   

20.
Primary cultures of embryonic chick sternal chondrocytes were embedded in a three-dimensional matrix of 1% solid agarose which was overlaid with nutrient media. The chondrocytes divided and formed nests of spherically shaped cells which were surrounded by an extensive extracellular matrix containing high molecular weight proteoglycans. Using light and electron microscopy, condensation of proteoglycan was observed pericellularly, often forming septa between cells of a nest, and as part of the outer boundary of the cell nest. No cross-striated collagen fibers were observed in the extracellular matrix although proteoglycan appeared to decorate a network of fine strands. Upon the addition of ascorbate to the nutrient media high molecular weight proteoglycans were synthesized, but there was a marked decrease in the synthesis of proteoglycans after a 10 day exposure to ascorbate. Morphologically, the decrease in proteoglycan synthesis was manifested in the discontinuous arrangement of the pericellular matrix as well as the diffuse form of the cell-nest boundary. Both of these structures were clearly defined in control cultures and were enriched in proteoglycan as demonstrated by ruthenium red staining. This study demonstrates that embryonic chondrocytes remain differentiated when cultured in solid agarose for a period of up to 15 days. They continue to synthesize their tissue specific macromolecules and are phenotypically stable when exposed to ascorbate for extended periods of time.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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