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.
Syndecan, a cell surface proteoglycan, binds multiple extracellular ligands, and is developmentally regulated in epithelial and mesenchymal tissues. The branching morphogenesis of embryonic lung is dependent on epithelial-mesenchymal interactions and, based on studies with inhibitors, on proteoglycan synthesis. To assess the role of syndecan in lung development, we examined the structure and distribution of syndecan in Day 12 to 18 embryonic mouse lungs using monoclonal antibody 281-2 for histology, immunopurification, and Western blots. At Day 12, syndecan localizes mainly on epithelial cell surfaces, but also stains mesenchymal cells near the epithelium. By Day 14, syndecan is expressed predominantly on epithelia and by Day 18, syndecan remains on airway epithelia but is absent from the alveolar pneumocytes. This change in expression correlates with a change in syndecan structure; the relative mass of syndecan gradually falls from Day 12 to Day 18 without a change in relative mass of the core protein. The difference is due to a developmental reduction in the size of the glycosaminoglycan chains; heparan sulfate chains on syndecan from Day 14 lungs were nearly twofold larger than those from Day 18 lungs. Newly synthesized syndecan in the lungs had the same relative mass as total syndecan, indicating that the change in mass is due to a developmental change in the nature of the syndecan synthesized. The alteration in syndecan structure could alter the function of this proteoglycan during lung development.  相似文献   

2.
Morphogenesis of the kidney is regulated by reciprocal tissue interactions between the epithelial ureter bud and the metanephric mesenchyme. The differentiation of the kidney involves profound changes in the extracellular matrix, and therefore matrix receptors may have an important role in this process. We studied the expression of syndecan, a cell surface proteoglycan acting as a receptor for interstitial matrix materials, by using a monoclonal antibody against the core protein of the molecule. Syndecan was not detected in the uninduced metanephric mesenchyme. During the formation of the ureter bud from the Wolffian duct, syndecan appeared in the mesenchymal cells around the invaginating bud. Simultaneously with the first branching of the ureter bud, the whole nephric mesenchyme became syndecan positive, but a 3- to 10-cell-thick layer around the branching ureter bud, representing the presumptive tubular cells, was most intensely stained. During the assembly of the mesenchyme cells into pretubular aggregates, syndecan was detected in these aggregates and, to a lesser degree, in the morphologically undifferentiated mesenchyme. Thereafter syndecan was found only in the differentiating epithelium, from which it was gradually lost during maturation of the nephron. It was last detected in the periphery of the kidney, where tubulogenesis still continued. In transfilter cultures we showed that syndecan appeared in the nephric mesenchyme during the period when the mesenchyme becomes programmed to transform into epithelial structures. By using interspecies recombinations and a species-specific antibody we excluded the possibility that syndecan in the mesenchyme would originate from the inductor. We conclude that syndecan expression is regulated by epithelial-mesenchymal interactions. The findings that syndecan appeared as an early response to induction and that its distribution showed both spatial and temporal correlation with kidney morphogenesis suggest an important role for this molecule in development.  相似文献   

3.
It has been previously shown that undifferentiated stage 23 to 24 chick limb bud mesenchymal cells can be maintained in culture under conditions which promote chondrogenesis. As the chondrocytes mature in vitro, their proteoglycan synthesis progresses through a specific and reproducible biosynthetic program. By the eighth day of culture, the chondrocytes are making proteoglycans that are similar to proteoglycans isolated from adult animal tissues. Relative to the Day 8 proteoglycans, the proteoglycans synthesized by chick limb bud chondrocytes earlier in culture have a smaller monomer size, longer chondroitin sulfate chains, shorter keratan sulfate chains, a higher ratio of chondroitin-6-sulfate to chondroitin-4-sulfate, and a decreased ability to interact with hyaluronic acid. We have reported a procedure to remove the cells from Day 8 cultures and strip away most, if not all, of the extracellular matrix. In addition, the chondrocytes can be separated from the 40-50% nonchondrocytic cells normally found in Day 8 cultures, and the two cell populations replated separately. This report describes the analysis of the proteoglycans synthesized by replated cells; this analysis demonstrates quantitative and qualitative differences between chondrocyte and nonchondrocyte proteoglycans. The overall rate of proteoglycan synthesis is fourfold higher and the rate of synthesis of high buoyant density proteoglycans 30-fold higher for replated chondrocytes relative to nonchondrocytes. Qualitatively, more newly synthesized nonchondrocyte proteoglycans partition at lower buoyant density on CsCl equilibrium density gradients than do chondrocyte proteoglycans. Nonchondrocyte proteoglycans are of two major classes: One has a monomer size slightly smaller than that of Day 8 chondrocyte proteoglycan, but has much longer glycosaminoglycan chains. The other is considerably smaller than Day 8 chondrocyte proteoglycans, but has glycosaminoglycans of slightly larger size. In contrast, replated chondrocytes synthesize, even as soon as 4.5 hr after replating, proteoglycans that are identical to Day 8 chondrocyte proteoglycan in monomer size, in glycosaminoglycan chain size, in aggregability, and in the ratio of 6-sulfated to 4-sulfated chondroitin. Since denuding mature Day 8 chondrocytes of their extracellular matrix does not cause them to recapitulate their developmentally regulated program for the biosynthesis of proteoglycans, it is concluded that the quality of mature chondrocyte proteoglycan is not altered by the absence of extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

4.
Previous studies showed that cultures of chick limb bud mesenchymal cells plated at high density, to maximize chondrogenic expression, had a much reduced extracellular matrix around chondrocytes when exposed to 4-methyl-, umbelliferyl-β-d-xyloside. The majority of newly synthesized chondroitin sulfate chains were found in the culture medium presumably bound to the xyloside as opposed to their normal deposition on the core protein of proteoglycan. The question remained open as to whether the development of an abnormal matrix affected the synthesis of extracellular deposition of other cartilage-specific macromolecules. We have analyzed, both morphologically and biochemically, the synthesis and deposition of Type I and Type II collagen by β-d-xyloside-treated cultures of limb mesenchymal cells. While the rate of collagen synthesis per plate and its extracellular accumulation after 8 days in culture were reduced to some extent, the ratios of Type II to Type I collagen and the morphological distribution of these macromolecules were not affected by exposure to β-d-xyloside. We conclude that the expression of the cartilage-specific Type II collagen during chondrogenic differentiation is, although reduced, qualitatively not dependent on the amount of extracellular chondroitin sulfate chains attached to matrix-associated proteoglycan core protein. However, prolonged exposure of limb bud cells to xylosides leads to the formation of a chondroitin sulfate- and collagen-deficient matrix which, in turn, reduces the capacity of limb bud cells to synthesize Types I and II collagen.  相似文献   

5.
6.
When chick limb bud mesenchyme cells from stage 23 to 24 embryos are plated at high density, they rapidly divide and a large proportion initiate chondrogenic expression during the first 2 to 3 days in culture. Between Days 4 and 8, the emergent chondrocytes mature and elaborate a cartilaginous matrix. The proteoglycans synthesized by the newly emergent Day 3 to 4 chondrocytes differ from those synthesized by either the prechondrogenic mesenchyme cells or the mature Day 8 chondrocytes. Cultures were grown from initial plating (Day 0) or from Day 2 in the continuous presence of 1 mM 4-methyl umbelliferyl-beta-D-xyloside, which acts intracellularly as a competitive acceptor with the endogenous core protein of proteoglycans for chondroitin sulfate synthesis. The proteoglycans synthesized by Day 8 cultures which had been maintained on xyloside or to which xyloside was added only 1 h prior to labeling were essentially identical. They were able to form aggregates, and they contained the same number of keratan sulfate chains, but only about 40% as many chondroitin sulfate chains, as normal. Additionally, both the chondroitin sulfate and keratan sulfate chains were 25% shorter than in the normal proteoglycans. The proteoglycans synthesized by cells in a culture maintained on xyloside until Day 8, and then switched to medium with no xyloside 1 h prior to labeling, were characteristic of those synthesized by normal mature Day 8 chondrocytes. These data suggest that stage 23 to 24 mesenchyme cells undergo normal chondrogenic maturation in culture in the presence of xylosides even though (a) most of the polysaccharides are synthesized onto the exogenously supplied xyloside substrate and released into the medium, (b) the proteoglycans that are synthesized are greatly reduced in polysaccharide content, and (c) the extracellular matrix as a consequence is greatly depleted in chondroitin sulfate content and, therefore, is abnormal in general morphology.  相似文献   

7.
Syndecan from embryonic tooth mesenchyme binds tenascin.   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Syndecan is a cell surface heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycan found on various epithelial cells but also in some embryonic mesenchymal tissues. We have immunoisolated syndecan from embryonic tooth mesenchyme that appeared as a 250-300-kDa molecule (Kav = 0.3 in Sepharose 4B), containing only heparan sulfate side chains (Mr = 35,000). Northern analysis of whole tooth germs and tooth mesenchymes also revealed high expression of syndecan mRNAs (2.6 and 3.4 kilobases). In the binding assay utilizing nitrocellulose as a solid phase to immobilize matrix molecules, syndecan immunoisolated from tooth mesenchyme revealed binding to tenascin, and this interaction was shown to be mediated via heparan sulfate side chains. In contrast, syndecan from mouse mammary epithelial cells showed only weak interaction with tenascin. We propose that syndecan and tenascin may represent interactions of a cell surface receptor and a matrix ligand involved in mesenchymal cell condensation and differentiation during early organogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
Cellular behaviour during development is dictated, in part, by the insoluble extracellular matrix and the soluble growth factor peptides, the major molecules responsible for integrating cells into morphologically and functionally defined groups. These extracellular molecules influence cellular behaviour by binding at the cell surface to specific receptors that transduce intracellular signals in various ways not yet fully clear. Syndecan, a cell surface proteoglycan found predominantly on epithelia in mature tissues binds both extracellular matrix components (fibronectin, collagens I, III, V, and thrombospondin) and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). Syndecan consists of chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulphate chains linked to a 31 kilodalton (kDa) integral membrane protein. Syndecan represents a family of integral membrane proteoglycans that differ in extracellular domains, but share cytoplasmic domains. Syndecan behaves as a matrix receptor: it binds selectively to components of the extracellular matrix, associates intracellularly with the actin cytoskeleton when cross-linked at the cell surface, its extracellular domain is shed upon cell rounding and it localizes solely to basolateral surfaces of simple epithelia. Mammary epithelial cells made syndecan-deficient become fibroblastic in morphology and cell behaviour, showing that syndecan maintains epithelial cell morphology. Syndecan changes in quantity, location and structure during development: it appears initially on four-cell embryos (prior to its known matrix ligands), becomes restricted in the pre-implementation embryo to the cells that will form the embryo proper, changes its expression due to epithelial-mesenchymal interactions (for example, induced in kidney mesenchyme by the ureteric bud), and with association of cells with extracellular matrix (for example, during B-cell differentiation), and ultimately, in mature tissues becomes restricted to epithelial tissues. The number and size of its glycosaminoglycan chains vary with changes in cell shape and organization yielding tissue type-specific polymorphic forms of syndecan. Its interactions with the major extracellular effector molecules that influence cell behaviour, its role in maintaining cell shape and its spatial and temporal changes in expression during development indicate that syndecan is involved in morphogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
Syndecan is an integral membrane proteoglycan that behaves as a matrix receptor by binding cells to interstitial matrix and associating intracellularly with the actin cytoskeleton. Using immunohistology, we have now localized this proteoglycan during the morphogenesis of various derivatives of the surface ectoderm in mouse embryos. Syndecan is expressed on ectodermal epithelia, but is selectively lost from the cells that differentiate into the localized placodes that initiate lens, nasal, otic and vibrissal development. The loss is transient on presumptive ear, nasal and vibrissal epithelia; the derivatives of the differentiating ectodermal cells that have lost syndecan subsequently re-express syndecan. In contrast, syndecan is initially absent from the mesenchyme underlying the surface ectoderm, and is transiently expressed when the surface ectoderm loses syndecan. These results demonstrate that expression of syndecan is developmentally regulated in a distinct spatiotemporal pattern. On epithelia, syndecan is lost at a time and, location that correlates with epithelial cell differentiation and, on mesenchyme, syndecan is acquired when the cells aggregate in proximity to the epithelium. This pattern of change with morphogenetic events is unique and not duplicated by other matrix molecules or adhesion receptors.  相似文献   

10.
The cell surface proteoglycan, syndecan, and the extracellular matrix glycoprotein, tenascin, are expressed in the mesenchyme during early development of many organs. We have studied the expression patterns of syndecan and tenascin during initiation of tooth development and in association with mesenchymal cell condensation and compared these with cell proliferation. Syndecan, tenascin and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation were localized by triple-labelling immunohistochemistry in serial sections of molar tooth germs of mouse embryos. Prior to formation of the epithelial tooth bud, syndecan accumulated in the mesenchymal cells which underlie the presumptive dental epithelium, but tenascin was not detected at this stage. Tenascin appeared during initiation of the epithelial down-growth at the lingual aspect of the tooth germ. During subsequent formation of the epithelial bud, at the late bud stage, syndecan and tenascin became exactly colocalized in the condensed mesenchyme which was clearly demarcated from other jaw mesenchyme. The expression of syndecan and tenascin was accompanied by rapid cell proliferation as indicated by marked BrdU incorporation. When development advanced to the cap stage, syndecan staining intensity in the dental papilla mesenchyme increased further whereas tenascin became reduced. In conclusion, the results demonstrate that the expression patterns of syndecan and tenascin overlap transiently during the period of mesenchymal cell condensation and that this is accompanied by cell proliferation. Syndecan and tenascin may play a role in growth control and in compartmentalization of the dental mesenchymal cells in the condensate.  相似文献   

11.
Cultured monolayers of NMuMG mouse mammary epithelial cells have augmented amounts of cell surface chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycan (GAG) when cultured in transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), presumably because of increased synthesis on their cell surface proteoglycan (named syndecan), previously shown to contain chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate GAG. This increase occurs throughout the monolayer as shown using soluble thrombospondin as a binding probe. However, comparison of staining intensity of the GAG chains and syndecan core protein suggests variability among cells in the attachment of GAG chains to the core protein. Characterization of purified syndecan confirms the enhanced addition of chondroitin sulfate in TGF-beta: (a) radiosulfate incorporation into chondroitin sulfate is increased 6.2-fold in this proteoglycan fraction and heparan sulfate is increased 1.8-fold, despite no apparent increase in amount of core protein per cell, and (b) the size and density of the proteoglycan are increased, but reduced by removal of chondroitin sulfate. This is shown in part by treatment of the cells with 0.5 mM xyloside that blocks the chondroitin sulfate addition without affecting heparan sulfate. Higher xyloside concentrations block heparan sulfate as well and syndecan appears at the cell surface as core protein without GAG chains. The enhanced amount of GAG on syndecan is partly attributed to an increase in chain length. Whereas this accounts for the additional heparan sulfate synthesis, it is insufficient to explain the total increase in chondroitin sulfate; an approximately threefold increase in chondroitin sulfate chain addition occurs as well, confirmed by assessing chondroitin sulfate ABC lyase (ABCase)-generated chondroitin sulfate linkage stubs on the core protein. One of the effects of TGF-beta during embryonic tissue interactions is likely to be the enhanced synthesis of chondroitin sulfate chains on this cell surface proteoglycan.  相似文献   

12.
To characterize proteoglycans in the prechondrogenic limb bud, proteoglycans were extracted with 4 M guanidine HCl containing a detergent and protease inhibitors from Day 13 fetal rat limb buds which had been labeled with [35S]sulfate for 3 h in vitro. About 90% of 35S-labeled proteoglycans was solubilized under the conditions used. The proteoglycan preparation was separated by DEAE-Sephacel column chromatography into three peaks; peak I eluted at 0.45 M NaCl concentration, peak II at 0.52 M, and peak III at 1.4 M. Peaks I and III were identified as proteoglycans bearing heparan sulfate side chains. The heparan sulfate proteoglycan in peak III was larger in hydrodynamic size than the proteoglycan in peak I. The heparan sulfate side chains of peak III proteoglycan were smaller in the size and more abundant in N-sulfated glucosamine than those of peak I proteoglycan. Peak II contained a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan with a core protein of a doublet of Mr 550,000 and 500,000. The chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan was easily solubilized with a physiological salt solution and the heparan sulfate proteoglycan in peak I was partially solubilized with the physiological salt solution. The remainder of the proteoglycan in peak I and the heparan sulfate proteoglycan in peak III could be solubilized effectively only with a solution containing a detergent, such as nonanoyl-N-methylglucamide. This observation indicates the difference in the localization among these three proteoglycans in the developing rat limb bud.  相似文献   

13.
Limb bud ectoderm inhibits chondrogenesis by limb bud mesenchymal cells cultured at high density or on collagen gels. This ectodermal antichondrogenic influence has been postulated to function in vivo in regulating the spatial patterning of cartilage and soft connective tissue in the limb. We have developed a method for preparing ectoderm-conditioned medium containing antichondrogenic activity. Using a simple bioassay, we have investigated some characteristics of the ectodermal products and their effects on limb bud mesenchymal cells. Inhibition of chondrogenesis by ectoderm-conditioned medium was tested on limb bud mesenchymal cells cultured on collagen gels. The antichondrogenic influence involves enhanced cell spreading and is alleviated by agents, such as cytochalasin D, that induce cell rounding. Fibronectin resembles ectoderm-conditioned medium in its ability to inhibit chondrogenesis and promote cell spreading in collagen gel cultures of limb bud mesenchymal cells. However, Western blot analysis shows that the antichondrogenic activity of ectoderm-conditioned medium is not due to fibronectin in the medium. Peptides related to the fibronectin cell-binding domain block the antichondrogenic effect of fibronectin, but not that of ectoderm-conditioned medium. On the other hand, an antibody to an integrin, as well as heparan sulfate, alleviates the antichondrogenic effects of both fibronectin and ectoderm-conditioned medium. The antichondrogenic effect of ectoderm-conditioned medium may be mediated by an integrin and by a cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, but it does not depend directly upon fibronectin-mediated cell spreading.  相似文献   

14.
I Thesleff 《Ontogenez》1989,20(4):341-349
A series of reciprocal interactions between epithelial and mesenchymal tissues control the morphogenesis and cell differentiation in the developing tooth. The molecular mechanisms operating in these interactions are, however, unknown at present. Structural components of the extracellular matrix (ECM) affect cellular behavior in the embryo and appear to be involved also in these regulatory processes. The ECM molecules exert their effects on cells through binding to specific matrix receptors on the cell surface. This review article summarizes our findings on the distribution patterns during tooth development of the ECM glycoproteins, fibronectin and tenascin, and of the cell surface proteoglycan, syndecan, which functions as a receptor for interstitial matrix. Based on the observed changes in these distribution patterns and on experimental evidence, roles for these molecules in epithelial-mesenchymal interactions during tooth development are suggested. Fibronectin and tenascin are enriched in the dental basement membrane at the time of odontoblast differentiation. These matrix glycoproteins may be involved in the cell-matrix interaction which controls differentiation of the dental mesenchymal cells into odontoblasts. Tenascin and syndecan are accumulated in the dental mesenchyme during bud stage of development. We have shown in tissue recombination experiments that the presumptive dental epithelium induces the expression of tenascin and syndecan in mesenchyme. We suggest that these molecules are involved in cell-matrix interactions, which regulate mesenchymal cell condensation during the earliest stages of tooth morphogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
It has been demonstrated that jervine, a steroidal alkaloid derived from plants of the genus Veratrum, exerts teratogenic effects in several animal species. Defects were restricted to structures which depend upon normal chondrogenesis for their development. Here we report studies of the temporal specificity of cellular sensitivity using limb bud mesenchyme cells obtained from Day 10 mouse embryos. These cells, when grown as high-density "spot" cultures, undergo chondrogenesis in vitro. Prior to differentiation, exposure of limb cell cultures to jervine suppressed subsequent accumulation of cartilage proteoglycans. Treatment after differentiation had no significant effect. Additionally, there was a genetic component to jervine sensitivity: C57BL/6J mice were sensitive, whereas NIH Swiss-Webster mice were insensitive. This strain-dependent difference was observed both in vivo and in vitro, supporting the validity of limb mesenchyme spot cultures as a model for jervine-induced teratogenicity. Our studies indicate that jervine acts specifically during an early phase of the differentiation of mesenchyme into cartilage. It is likely that a specific stem cell population is the target tissue of this compound.  相似文献   

16.
During metamorphosis of Xenopus laevis the extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins cytotactin and cytotactin-binding (CTB) proteoglycan and the cell adhesion molecules N-CAM and Ng-CAM, appear in highly restricted patterns determined by immunofluorescence histology. During limb development, cytotactin appears from the earliest stages in a meshwork of ECM fibrils associated with migrating mesenchymal cells forming the limb bud. Cytotactin also appears in the ECM between the apical limb ectoderm and mesenchyme. Later, both cytotactin and CTB proteoglycan appear co-localized within the central (prechondrogenic) limb mesenchyme. During chondrogenesis in these areas, cytotactin becomes restricted to perichondrium, while CTB proteoglycan is expressed throughout the cartilage matrix. The premyogenic mesenchyme surrounding the chondrogenic areas expressed N-CAM. Later, N-CAM is concentrated at the myogenic foci where cytotactin appears at sites of nerve/muscle contact and in tendons. Expression of these molecules in the blastemas of regenerating limbs was also studied, and during development of the central nervous system, stomach, and small intestine. Analysis of the expression patterns of cytotactin and CTB proteoglycan throughout development and metamorphosis reveals several consistent themes. The expression of these molecules is highly dynamic, often transient, and associated with key morphogenetic events. Cytotactin appears at multiple sites where cells undergo a transition from an undifferentiated, migratory phenotype to a differentiated phenotype. One or both molecules appear at several sites of border formation between disparate cell collectives, and CTB proteoglycan expression is associated with chondrogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
Promotion of cell growth and differentiation by growth factors during early development and organ formation are both temporally and spatially very precise. Syndecan is a well characterized integral membrane proteoglycan that binds several extracellular matrix components via its heparan sulfate chains and is therefore suggested to participate in cell regulation. Syndecan-like molecules, as low affinity receptors for heparin-binding growth factors, have been recently suggested to also regulate growth factor activity. Heparin/heparan sulfate interaction is required before, e.g. basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) can associate with its high affinity cell surface receptors and trigger signal transduction. In this paper we show that syndecan, but not free heparan sulfate chains, can simultaneously bind both bFGF and extracellular matrix molecules. Moreover, increased DNA synthesis of 3T3 cells was observed when the 3T3 cells were exposed to beads coated with the fibronectin-syndecan-bFGF complex, indicating that bFGF remains biologically active even when immobilized to matrix via the heparan sulfate chains of syndecan. Finally, when bFGF was bound to the surface of another cell type (epithelial), co-culture with 3T3 cells stimulated 3T3 cell growth. Therefore, we suggest that syndecan-like molecules may determine sites of growth factor action at cell-matrix and cell-cell interfaces.  相似文献   

18.
The syndecans are a gene family of four transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycans that bind, via their HS chains, diverse components of the cellular microenvironment. To evaluate the expression of the individual syndecans, we prepared cDNA probes to compare mRNA levels in various adult mouse tissues and cultured mouse cells representing various epithelial, fibroblastic, endothelial, and neural cell types and B cells at various stages of differentiation. We also prepared antibody probes to assess whether the extracellular domains of the individual syndecans are shed into the conditioned media of cultured cells. Our results show that all cells and tissues studied, except B-stem cells, express at least one syndecan family member; most cells and tissues express multiple syndecans. However, each syndecan family member is expressed selectively in cell-, tissue-, and development-specific patterns. The extracellular domain of all syndecan family members is shed as an intact proteoglycan. Thus, most, if not all, cells acquire a distinctive repertoire of the four syndecan family members as they differentiate, resulting in selective patterns of expression that likely reflect distinct functions.  相似文献   

19.
Morphogenesis of embryonic organs is regulated by epithelial-mesenchymal interactions associating with changes in the extracellular matrix (ECM). The response of the cells to the changes in the ECM must involve integral cell surface molecules that recognize their matrix ligand and initiate transmission of signal intracellularly. We have studied the expression of the cell surface proteoglycan, syndecan, which is a matrix receptor for epithelial cells (Saunders, S., M. Jalkanen, S. O'Farrell, and M. Bernfield. J. Cell Biol. In press.), and the matrix glycoprotein, tenascin, which has been proposed to be involved in epithelial-mesenchymal interactions (Chiquet-Ehrismann, R., E. J. Mackie, C. A. Pearson, and T. Sakakura. 1986. Cell. 47:131-139) in experimental tissue recombinations of dental epithelium and mesenchyme. Our earlier studies have shown that in mouse embryos both syndecan and tenascin are intensely expressed in the condensing dental mesenchyme surrounding the epithelial bud (Thesleff, I., M. Jalkanen, S. Vainio, and M. Bernfield. 1988. Dev. Biol. 129:565-572; Thesleff, I., E. Mackie, S. Vainio, and R. Chiquet-Ehrismann. 1987. Development. 101:289-296). Analysis of rat-mouse tissue recombinants by a monoclonal antibody against the murine syndecan showed that the presumptive dental epithelium induces the expression of syndecan in the underlying mesenchyme. The expression of tenascin was induced in the dental mesenchyme in the same area as syndecan. The syndecan and tenascin positive areas increased with time of epithelial-mesenchymal contact. Other ECM molecules, laminin, type III collagen, and fibronectin, did not show a staining pattern similar to that of syndecan and tenascin. Oral epithelium from older embryos had lost its ability to induce syndecan expression but the presumptive dental epithelium induced syndecan expression even in oral mesenchyme of older embryos. Our results indicate that the expression of syndecan and tenascin in the tooth mesenchyme is regulated by epithelial-mesenchymal interactions. Because of their early appearance, syndecan and tenascin may be used to study the molecular regulation of this interaction. The similar distribution patterns of syndecan and tenascin in vivo and in vitro and their early appearance as a result of epithelial-mesenchymal interaction suggest that these molecules may be involved in the condensation and differentiation of dental mesenchymal cells.  相似文献   

20.
When chick limb buds were isolated from stage 22–23 embryos and cultured in chemically defined medium “BGJb,” the explants grew and, after about 9 days, showed good chondrogenesis of recognizable cartilage segments. Cartilage-type proteoglycan (termed PCS-H) was not synthesized during early days of culture, but by Day 9, it became a major proteoglycan constituent of the tissue. Freshly dissociated limb bud cells, when plated as monodispersed cultures at a density of 7 × 106 cells/ml of BGJb, did not undergo chondrogenic differentiation and, instead, assumed the appearance of unhealthy or degenerated cells. During 9 days of culture, even though proteoglycans were synthesized, they were nevertheless of much smaller molecular size than PCS-H. When limb bud cells were cultured as a pellet containing 7 × 106 cells in 1 ml of BGJb, a more tightly packed aggregate of about 2 × 106 cells appeared in an inner region of the pullet during the first 24 hr of culture, and by Day 12 the aggregate had differentiated into a cartilage nodule surrounded by a thin layer of what appear to be ectodermal cells. As the conversion of aggregate into cartilage nodule progressed, newly formed proteoglycans gradually became more like cartilage-type proteoglycans, and by Day 12 they had many chemical and physical characteristics similar to those of the proteoglycans isolated from fully differentiated cartilages. The results indicate that the initial association of limb bud cells is an important factor for the chondrogenesis in BGJb and further suggest that the tight binding of the cell surfaces to one another may directly or indirectly stimulate the mechanism of synthesis of cartilage-type proteoglycans.  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