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1.
Hyaluronan in morphogenesis   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Hyaluronan is a very large polysaccharide that is found in extracellular matrices, at the cell surface and inside cells. This review focuses on the functions of hyaluronan directly associated with the cell surface, where it is commonly present as the essential core of a highly hydrated pericellular matrix that contains several other components (hyaladherins) bound to hyaluronan. Three major molecular characteristics of hyaluronan contribute to its physiological functions: its unique hydrodynamic properties, its interactions with structural extracellular hyaladherins, and its instructive effects on cell signaling and behavior. Recent studies of hyaluronan-deficient mouse embryos illustrate the importance of each of these classes of function of hyaluronan. It is postulated that the morphogenetic effects of hyaluronan are due to its ability to act as a template for assembly of a multi-component, pericellular matrix as well as to its physical properties. This matrix would provide a hydrated environment in which cells are separated from structural barriers to morphogenetic changes and receive signals from hyaluronan itself and from associated factors.  相似文献   

2.
Hyaluronan and versican-rich pericellular matrices form around arterial smooth muscle cells (ASMC) preferentially during the detachment phase of proliferation and migration. PDGF is a potent mitogen and chemotactic agent for ASMC and also stimulates the production of extracellular matrix molecules which may regulate the proliferative and migratory capacity of the cells. We have examined the effect of PDGF on the formation of hyaluronan-dependent pericellular matrices, and on the synthesis and interaction of several major pericellular coat constituents. As demonstrated using a particle exclusion assay, PDGF stimulated the formation of pericellular matrices and was seen both in an increased proportion of cells with a coat and a greater coat size. This increase was accompanied by a transient increase in hyaluronan synthase 2 (HAS2) expression and an increase in hyaluronan synthesis and polymer length. PDGF also increased the synthesis of versican and link protein as measured at the mRNA and protein levels. The amount of native versican-hyaluronan aggregates and link-stabilized aggregate was also increased following PDGF treatment. Time lapse imaging showed that pericellular matrix formation occurred around trailing cell processes prior to their detachment. These data suggest that PDGF modulates the synthesis and organization of ASMC pericellular coat-forming molecules such as versican, hyaluronan, and link protein, which leads to extracellular matrix expansion and alterations in ASMC phenotype.  相似文献   

3.
Hyaluronan.   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
Hyaluronan (hyaluronic acid) is a high-molecular-mass polysaccharide found in the extracellular matrix, especially of soft connective tissues. It is synthesized in the plasma membrane of fibroblasts and other cells by addition of sugars to the reducing end of the polymer, whereas the nonreducing end protrudes into the pericellular space. The polysaccharide is catabolized locally or carried by lymph to lymph nodes or the general circulation, from where it is cleared by the endothelial cells of the liver sinusoids. The overall turnover rate is surprisingly rapid for a connective tissue matrix component (t1/2 0.5 to a few days). Hyaluronan has been assigned various physiological functions in the intercellular matrix, e.g., in water and plasma protein homeostasis. Hyaluronan production increases in proliferating cells and the polymer may play a role in mitosis. Extensive hyaluronidase-sensitive coats have been identified around mesenchymal cells. They are either anchored firmly in the plasma membrane or bound via hyaluronan-specific binding proteins (receptors). Such receptors have now been identified on many different cells, e.g., the lymphocyte homing receptor CD 44. Interaction between a hyaluronan receptor and extracellular polysaccharide has been connected with locomotion and cell migration. Hyaluronan seems to play an important role during development and differentiation and has other cell regulatory activities. Hyaluronan has also been recognized in clinical medicine. A concentrated solution of hyaluronan (10 mg/ml) has, through its tissue protective and rheological properties, become a device in ophthalmic surgery. Analysis of serum hyaluronan is promising in the diagnosis of liver disease and various inflammatory conditions, e.g., rheumatoid arthritis. Interstitial edema caused by accumulation of hyaluronan may cause dysfunction in various organs.  相似文献   

4.
In this study we examined the capacity of normal human mesothelial (NHM) cells and human malignant mesothelioma cells to form hyaluronan-containing pericellular matrices or "coats." The assembly of the pericellular coats was visualized by a particle exclusion assay. We found that large hyaluronan-containing coats were formed around NHM cells whereas their transformed counterparts had no or very limited coats. The coats were removed by treatment with Streptomyces hyaluronidase, which specifically degrades hyaluronan. NHM cells exhibited hyaluronan-containing pericellular matrix within 5 h after seeding. The formation of the coats was stimulated by platelet-derived growth factor and epidermal growth factor. Interestingly, the assembly of the hyaluronan-dependent pericellular matrices was inhibited by the addition of hyaluronan dodecasaccharides. The inhibitory effect on the formation of the coats was due to a destabilization of pericellular matrix and not due to an inhibitory effect of hyaluronan dodecasaccharides on hyaluronan synthesis. In contrast, hyaluronan hexasaccharides, an inhibitor of the interaction between polymeric hyaluronan and its cell surface receptors, had no effect on the size of the coat. Thus, our results are compatible with the possibility that the pericellular matrix surrounding NHM cells consists of newly synthesized hyaluronan which is extruded from the cell and independent of hyaluronan receptors on the cell surface. The coat seems to be stabilized by interactions (hyaluronan-hyaluronan or hyaluronan-protein bridges) which can be prevented by hyaluronan dodecasaccharides.  相似文献   

5.
Initial assembly of extracellular matrix occurs within a zone immediately adjacent to the chondrocyte cell surface termed the cell- associated or pericellular matrix. Assembly within the pericellular matrix compartment requires specific cell-matrix interactions to occur, that are mediated via membrane receptors. The focus of this study is to elucidate the mechanisms of assembly and retention of the cartilage pericellular matrix proteoglycan aggregates important for matrix organization. Assembly of newly synthesized chondrocyte pericellular matrices was inhibited by the addition to hyaluronan hexasaccharides, competitive inhibitors of the binding of hyaluronan to its cell surface receptor. Fully assembled chondrocyte pericellular matrices were displaced using hyaluronan hexasaccharides as well. When exogenous hyaluronan was added to matrix-free chondrocytes in combination with aggrecan, a pericellular matrix equivalent in size to an endogenous matrix formed within 30 min of incubation. Addition of hyaluronan and aggrecan to glutaraldehyde-fixed chondrocytes resulted in matrix assembly comparable to live chondrocytes. These matrices could be inhibited from assembling by the addition of excess hyaluronan hexasaccharides or displaced once assembled by subsequent incubation with hyaluronan hexasaccharides. The results indicate that the aggrecanrich chondrocyte pericellular matrix is not only on a scaffolding of hyaluronan, but actually anchored to the cell surface via the interaction between hyaluronan and hyaluronan receptors.  相似文献   

6.
Hyaluronan, a major macropolysaccharide in the extracellular matrix of connective tissues, is intimately involved in the biology of cancer. Hyaluronan accumulates into the stroma of various human tumors and modulates intracellular signaling pathways, cell proliferation, motility and invasive properties of malignant cells. Experimental and clinicopathological evidence highlights the importance of hyaluronan in tumor growth and metastasis. A high stromal hyaluronan content is associated with poorly differentiated tumors and aggressive clinical behavior in human adenocarcinomas. Instead, the squamous cell carcinomas and malignant melanomas tend to have a reduced hyaluronan content. In addition to the stroma–cancer cell interaction, hyaluronan can influence stromal cell recruitment, tumor angiogenesis and epithelial–mesenchymal transition. Hyaluronan receptors, hyaluronan synthases and hyaluronan degrading enzymes, hyaluronidases, are involved in the modulation of cancer progression, depending on the tumor type. Furthermore, intracellular signaling and angiogenesis are affected by the degradation products of hyaluronan. Hyaluronan has also therapeutic implications since it is involved in multidrug resistance.  相似文献   

7.
Proteoglycans: many forms and many functions.   总被引:34,自引:0,他引:34  
Proteoglycans are produced by most eukaryotic cells and are versatile components of pericellular and extracellular matrices. They belong to many different protein families. Their functions vary from the physical effects of the proteoglycan aggrecan, which binds with link protein to hyaluronan to form multimolecular aggregates in cartilage; to the intercalated membrane protein CD44 that has a proteoglycan form and is a receptor and a cell-binding site for hyaluronan; to heparan sulfate proteoglycans of the syndecan and other families that provide matrix binding sites and cell-surface receptors for growth factors such as fibroblast growth factor (FGF). One feature that recurs in proteoglycan biology is that their structure is open to extensive modulation during cellular expression. Examples of protein changes are known, but a major source of structural variation is in the glycosaminoglycan chains. The number of chains and their length can vary, as well as their pattern of sulfation. This may result in the switching of different chain types with different properties, e.g., chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate, and it may also result in the selective expression of sulfated chain sequences that have specific functions. The control of glycosaminoglycan structure is not well understood, but it does appear to be used to change the properties of proteoglycans to suit different biological needs. Proteoglycan forms of proteins are thus important modifiers of the organization of the pericellular and extracellular matrices and modulators of the processes that occur there.  相似文献   

8.
Hyaluronan is a megadalton glycosaminoglycan composed of repeating units of D-N-acetylglucosamine-beta-D-Glucuronic acid. It is known to form a highly hydrated pericellular coat around chondrocytes, fibrosarcoma, and smooth muscle cells. Using environmental scanning electron microscopy we detected fully hydrated hyaluronan pericellular coats around rat chondrocytes (RCJ-P) and epithelial cells (A6). Hyaluronan mediates early adhesion of both chondrocytes and A6 cells to glass surfaces. We show that chondrocytes in suspension establish early "soft contacts" with the substrate through a thick, hyaluronidase-sensitive coat (4.4 +/- 0.7 microm). Freshly-attached cells drift under shear stress, leaving hyaluronan "footprints" on the surface. This suggests that chondrocytes are surrounded by a multilayer of entangled hyaluronan molecules. In contrast, A6 cells have a 2.2 +/- 0.4- microm-thick hyaluronidase-sensitive coat, do not drift under shear stress, and remain firmly anchored to the surface. We consider the possibility that in A6 cells single hyaluronan molecules, spanning the whole thickness of the pericellular coat, mediate these tight contacts.  相似文献   

9.
Hyaluronan matrices are ubiquitous in normal and pathological biological processes. This remarkable diversity is related to their unique mechanism of synthesis by hyaluronan synthases. These enzymes are normally activated in the plasma membrane and utilize cytosolic substrates directly to form these large polyanionic glycosaminoglycans, which are extruded directly into the extracellular space. The extracellular matrices that are formed interact with cell surface receptors, notably CD44, that often dictate the biological processes, as described in the accompanying minireviews of this series. This article focuses on the discovery in recent studies that many cell stress responses initiate the synthesis of a monocyte-adhesive hyaluronan extracellular matrix, which forms a central focus for subsequent inflammatory processes that are modulated by the dialogue between the matrix and the inflammatory cells. The mechanisms involve active hyaluronan synthases at the cell membrane when cell stresses occur at physiological levels of glucose. However, dividing cells at hyperglycemic levels of glucose initiate the synthesis of hyaluronan in intracellular compartments, which induces endoplasmic reticulum stress and autophagy, processes that probably contribute greatly to diabetic pathologies.  相似文献   

10.
Although considered a pericellular matrix component, hyaluronan was recently localized in the cytoplasm and nucleus of proliferating cells, supporting earlier reports that hyaluronan was present in locations such as the nucleus, rough endoplasmic reticulum, and caveolae. This suggests that it can play roles both inside and outside the cell. Hyaluronan metabolism is coupled to mitosis and cell motility, but it is not clear if intracellular hyaluronan associates with cytoskeletal elements or plays a structural role. Here we report the distribution of intracellular hyaluronan, microtubules, and RHAMM in arterial smooth muscle cells in vitro. The general distribution of intracellular hyaluronan more closely resembled microtubule staining rather than actin filaments. Hyaluronan was abundant in the perinuclear microtubule-rich areas and was present in lysosomes, other vesicular structures, and the nucleolus. Partially fragmented fluorescein-hyaluronan was preferentially translocated to the perinuclear area compared with high-molecular-weight hyaluronan. In the mitotic spindle, hyaluronan colocalized with tubulin and with the hyaladherin RHAMM, a cell surface receptor and microtubule-associated protein that interacts with dynein and maintains spindle pole stability. Internalized fluorescein-hyaluronan was also seen at the spindle. Following telophase, an abundance of hyaluronan near the midbody microtubules at the cleavage furrow was also noted. In permeabilized cells, fluorescein-hyaluronan bound to RHAMM-associated microtubules. These findings suggest novel functions for hyaluronan in cellular physiology.  相似文献   

11.
The contribution of hyaluronan-dependent pericellular matrix to TGF-β1-driven induction and maintenance of myofibroblasts is not understood. Hyaluronan is an extracellular matrix (ECM) glycosaminoglycan important in cell adhesion, proliferation and migration, and is implicated in myofibroblast formation and maintenance. Reduced turnover of hyaluronan has been linked to differentiation of myofibroblasts and potentiation of lung fibrosis. Fibronectin is a fibril forming adhesive glycoprotein that is also upregulated following induction with TGF-β1. Although they are known to bind each other, the interplay between hyaluronan and fibronectin in the pericellular matrix during myofibroblast induction and matrix assembly is not clear. This study addresses the role of hyaluronan and its interaction with fibrillar matrix components during myofibroblast formation. Hyaluronan and fibronectin were increased and co-localized in the ECM following myofibroblast induction by TGF-β1. Inhibition of hyaluronan synthesis in TGF-β1-induced lung myofibroblasts over a 4 day period with 4-methyl umbelliferone (4-MU) further enhanced myofibroblast morphology, caused increased deposition of fibronectin and type I collagen in the ECM, and increased expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin and hyaluronan synthase 2 (HAS2) mRNA. Hyaluronan oligosaccharides or hyaluronidase treatment, which more effectively disrupted the pericellular matrix, had similar effects. CD44 and β1 integrins co-localized in the cell membrane and along some stress fibers. However, CD44 and hyaluronan were specifically excluded from focal adhesions, and associated primarily with cortical actin. Time-lapse imaging of the immediate effects of hyaluronidase digestion showed that hyaluronan matrix primarily mediates attachment of membrane and cortical actin between focal contacts, suggesting that surface adhesion through hyaluronan and CD44 is distinct from focal adhesion through β1 integrins and fibronectin. Fluorescein-labeled hyaluronan bound regularly along fibronectin fibers and co-localized more with β1 integrin and less with CD44. Therefore, the hyaluronan matrix can interfere with the assembly of fibrillar ECM components, and this interplay regulates the degree of myofibroblast formation. These data also suggest that adhesion through hyaluronan matrix impacts cytoskeletal organization, and is potentially part of a clutch mechanism that regulates stick and slip of myofibroblasts by affecting the adhesion to and organization of fibronectin and collagen.  相似文献   

12.
Hyaluronan is a major component of the pericellular matrix surrounding tumor cells, including colon carcinomas. Elevated cycooxygenase-2 levels have been implicated in several malignant properties of colon cancer. We now show for the first time a strong link between hyaluronan-CD44 interaction and cyclooxygenase-2 in colon cancer cells. First, we have shown that increased expression of hyaluronan synthase-2 induces malignant cell properties, including increased proliferation, anchorage-independent growth, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition in HIEC6 cells. Second, constitutive hyaluronan-CD44 interaction stimulates a signaling pathway involving ErbB2, phosphoinositide 3-kinase/AKT, beta-catenin, and cyclooxygenase-2/prostaglandin E(2) in HCA7 colon carcinoma cells. Third, the HA/CD44-activated ErbB2 --> phosphoinositide 3-kinase/AKT --> beta-catenin pathway stimulates cell survival/cell proliferation through COX-2 induction in hyaluronan-overexpressing HIEC6 cells and in HCA7 cells. Fourth, perturbation of hyaluronan-CD44 interaction by hyaluronan oligomers or CD44-silencing RNA decreases cyclooxygenase-2 expression and enzyme activity, and inhibition of cyclooxygenase-2 decreases hyaluronan production suggesting the possibility of an amplifying positive feedback loop between hyaluronan and cyclooxygenase-2. We conclude that hyaluronan is an important endogenous regulator of colon cancer cell survival properties and that cyclooxygenase-2 is a major mediator of these hyaluronan-induced effects. Defining hyaluronan-dependent cyclooxygenase-2/prostaglandin E(2)-associated signaling pathways will provide a platform for developing novel therapeutic approaches for colon cancer.  相似文献   

13.
The chondrocyte pericellular matrix is an essential zone for cartilage matrix assembly and turnover. Electron micrographs of native endogenous and composition-defined exogenous pericellular matrices, both preserved via ruthenium hexaminetrichloride fixation procedures, depict strikingly similar networks of hyaluronan and proteoglycan extending out from the cell surface. Biochemical and morphological analyses of matrix regrowth show that monoclonal antibodies directed against the hyaluronan receptor CD44 blocked chondrocyte pericellular matrix assembly. Immunoperoxidase electron microscopy was used to display regular repeating spacing patterns of hyaluronan/proteoglycan assembly at the cell surface. These patterns compared well with the ultrastructural immunolocalization of CD44 at the cell surface. All of these data suggest that the hyaluronan receptor CD44 retains and participates in the assembly of the chondrocyte pericellular matrix.  相似文献   

14.
Hyaluronan is an oligosaccharide found in the pericellular matrix of numerous cell types and hyaluronan-induced signaling is known to facilitate fibrosis and cancer progression in some tissues. Hyaluronan is also commonly instilled into the eye during cataract surgery to protect the corneal endothelium from damage. Despite this, little is known about the distribution of hyaluronan or its receptors in the normal ocular lens. In this study, hyaluronan was found throughout the mouse lens, with apparently higher concentrations in the lens epithelium. CD44, a major cellular receptor for hyaluronan, is expressed predominately in mouse secondary lens fiber cells born from late embryogenesis into adulthood. Surgical removal of lens fiber cells from adult mice resulted in a robust upregulation of CD44 protein, which preceded the upregulation of α-smooth muscle actin expression typically used as a marker of epithelial–mesenchyma transition in this model of lens epithelial cell fibrosis. Mice lacking the CD44 gene had morphologically normal lenses with a response to lens fiber cell removal similar to wildtype, although they exhibited an increase in cell-associated hyaluronan. Overall, these data suggest that lens cells have a hyaluronan-containing pericellular matrix whose structure is partially regulated by CD44. Further, these data indicate that CD44 upregulation in the lens epithelium may be an earlier marker of lens injury responses in the mouse lens than the upregulation of α-smooth muscle actin.  相似文献   

15.
Hyaluronan has well defined functions in extracellular matrices and at the surface of cells. However, several studies have now shown that significant pools of hyaluronan are also present intracellularly, but its function therein is unknown. One avenue of investigation that may assist in defining the function of intracellular hyaluronan is to identify intracellular hyaluronan-binding proteins. In previous studies we identified CDC37, a cell cycle regulatory protein, using a monoclonal antibody that recognizes a novel group of hyaluronan-binding proteins. In this study, we have identified a second hyaluronan-binding protein with this antibody and characterized its properties. This protein, which we have termed IHABP4, was also found to be an intracellular and a specific hyaluronan-binding protein, containing several hyaluronan-binding motifs: (R/K)[X(7)](R/K) (where R/K denotes arginine or lysine and X denotes non-acidic amino acids). Furthermore, we have determined the gene organization of IHABP4 and cloned cDNAs for the chick, mouse, and human homologs. Comparison of the deduced chick, mouse, and human protein sequences showed that the hyaluronan-binding motifs, (R/K)[X(7)](R/K), in these sequences are conserved; both chick and mouse IHABP4 were shown directly to bind hyaluronan. Biochemical fractionation and immunofluorescent localization of epitope-tagged IHABP4 indicated that it is mainly present in the cytoplasm. These data support the possibility that intracellular hyaluronan and its binding proteins may play important roles in cell behavior.  相似文献   

16.
CD44 on lymphocytes binding to its carbohydrate ligand hyaluronan can mediate primary adhesion (rolling interactions) of lymphocytes on vascular endothelial cells. This adhesion pathway is utilized in the extravasation of activated T cells from the blood into sites of inflammation and therefore influences patterns of lymphocyte homing and inflammation. Hyaluronan is a glycosaminoglycan found in the extracellular matrix and is involved in a number of biological processes. We have shown that the expression of hyaluronan on the surface of endothelial cells is inducible by proinflammatory cytokines. However, the manner through which hyaluronan is anchored to the endothelial cell surface so that it can resist shear forces and the mechanism of the regulation of the level of hyaluronan on the cell surface has not been investigated. In order to characterize potential hyaluronan receptors on endothelial cells, we performed analyses of cell surface staining by flow cytometry on intact endothelial cells and ligand blotting assays using membrane fractions. Hyaluronan binding activity was detected as a major species corresponding to the size of CD44, and this was confirmed to be the same by Western blotting and immunoprecipitation. Moreover, alterations in the surface level of hyaluronan after tumor necrosis factor-alpha stimulation is regulated primarily by changes in the cell surface levels of the hyaluronan-binding form of CD44. In laminar flow assays, lymphoid cells specifically roll on hyaluronan anchored by purified CD44 coated on glass tubes, indicating that the avidity of the endothelial CD44/hyaluronan interaction is sufficient to support rolling adhesions under conditions mimicking physiologic shear forces. Together these studies show that CD44 serves to anchor hyaluronan on endothelial cell surfaces, that activation of CD44 is a major regulator of endothelial surface hyaluronan expression, and that the non-covalent interaction between CD44 and hyaluronan is sufficient to provide resistance to shear under physiologic conditions and thereby support the initial steps of lymphocyte extravasation.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract. Hyaluronan was localized in postimplantation mouse embryos using CD44, the principal hyaluronan receptor. The specificity of CD44 receptor-globulin labelling was confirmed using Streptomyces hyaluronidase, anti-chondroitin sulfate antibody, and other receptor globulins. Our major findings are summarized as follows:
1. Implantation of the blastocyst into the uterine wall triggers a rapid loss of hyaluronan from the extracellular matrix of decidual cells on the anti-mesometrial side of the uterus.
2. Hyaluronan appears early in development in the yolk cavity, and the basement membranes of primitive ectoderm and primitive endoderm.
3. During gastrulation, mesodermal cells enter a hyaluronan-rich environment, but lack a pericellular hyaluronan coat themselves.
4. In limb bud embryos, hyaluronan is present throughout the cranial mesenchyme, but is generally not present in the branchial bars, somites, or limb buds.
5. At mid-gestation, hyaluronan is present in the axial skeleton, craniofacial mesenchyme, endocardial cushions of the heart, smooth muscle of the gastrointestinal tract, and connective tissue throughout the body.
The pattern of hyaluronan expression in the day 13 fetus is nearly identical to the published distribution of transforming growth factor β (TGF β), suggesting a close functional relationship between these molecules. Together, the results suggest that hyaluronan is involved in the formation of early mesoderm, differentiation of craniofacial mesenchyme, and morphogenesis of the axial skeleton.  相似文献   

18.
The role of hyaluronan in the pulmonary alveolus   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The duplex nature of the lining of the pulmonary alveolus has long been appreciated. It appears that surfactant is present at the interface with air where it prevents the collapse of the alveolus by lowering surface tension and that the surfactant rests on an aqueous subphase. This subphase has enough structure to form a smooth, continuous surface over the projections of the epithelial cells and because of its hydrophilic nature it attracts the polar heads of surfactant phospholipids. The chemical composition of the subphase has not been addressed. Type II cells in the wall of the alveolus are specialized to produce surfactant and they also secrete hyaluronan (hyaluronic acid) into the subphase. In solution, molecules of hyaluronan appear to be flexible coils which self-aggregate. The resulting solutions are quite viscous and exhibit non-Newtonian behavior. Hyaluronan binds to cell surface receptors and to proteins in the extracellular matrix. The networks formed with self-aggregated hyaluronan with or without proteins create gels whose properties depend largely upon the molecular weight of the hyaluronan and its concentration. Hyaluronan is also known to interact with phospholipids and has hydrophobic regions which could bind to the hydrophobic surfactant proteins B and C. The working hypothesis presented herein states that hyaluronan interacts with itself and with proteins in the subphase to form a hydrophilic gel. At the epithelial cell layer the components are concentrated due to tethered HA molecules and the gel smooths over cell projections. At the air interface the components are so dilute that a layer which is essentially water is present. The surfactant phospholipids spread on the water. Direct interactions of HA and surfactant phospholipids may also occur and contribute to the stability of the surfactant layer.  相似文献   

19.
Intracellular localization of hyaluronan in proliferating cells.   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Hyaluronan is a high molecular weight glycosaminoglycan found in the extracellular matrix of many tissues, where it is believed to promote cell migration and proliferation. It was recently shown that hyaluronan-dependent pericellular matrix formation is a rapid process that occurs as cells detach during mitosis. Growing evidence for intracellular hyaluronan in tissues in vivo, together with evidence of intracellular hyaluronan binding molecules, prompted us to examine hyaluronan distribution and uptake as well as hyaluronan binding sites in cells and their relationship to cell proliferation in vitro, using a biotinylated hyaluronan binding protein and fluorescein-labeled hyaluronan. In permeabilized smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts, hyaluronan staining was seen in the cytoplasm in a diffuse, network-like pattern and in vesicles. Nuclear hyaluronan staining was observed and confirmed by confocal microscopy and was often associated with nucleoli and nuclear clefts. After serum stimulation of 3T3 cells, there was a dramatic increase in cytoplasmic hyaluronan staining, especially during late prophase/early prometaphase of mitosis. In contrast, unstimulated cells were negative. There was a pronounced alteration in the amount and distribution of hyaluronan binding sites, from a mostly nucleolar distribution in unstimulated cells to one throughout the cytoplasm and nucleus after stimulation. Exogenous fluorescein-labeled hyaluronan was taken up avidly into vesicles in growing cells but was localized distinctly compared to endogenous hyaluronan, suggesting that hyaluronan in cells may be derived from an intracellular source. These data indicate that intracellular hyaluronan may be involved in nucleolar function, chromosomal rearrangement, or other events in proliferating cells. (J Histochem Cytochem 47:1331-1341, 1999)  相似文献   

20.
Exquisite control of chondrocyte function in the zone of hypertrophy results in expansive growth of cartilaginous growth plates, and is a prerequisite for normal skeletal lengthening. We hypothesize that hyaluronan-mediated hydrostatic pressure causes lacunae expansion in the zone of hypertrophy; an important mechanism in cartilaginous growth plate and associated skeletal expansion. The role of hyaluronan and CD44 in this mechanism was studied using organ culture of the bipolar cranial base synchondroses. Hyaluronan was present in the hypertrophic zones, pericellular to the hypertrophic chondrocytes, while no hyaluronan was detected in the resting, proliferating and maturing zones. This localization of hyaluronan was associated with increased lacunae size, suggesting that chondrocytes deposit and retain pericellular hyaluronan as they mature. In comparison, Toluidine Blue staining was associated with the territorial matrix. Hyaluronidase, the hyaluronan-degrading enzyme, and CD44, the receptor for hyaluronan which also participates in the uptake and degradation of hyaluronan, were co-localized within the zone of ossification. This pattern of expression suggests that cells in the early zone of ossification internalize and degrade hyaluronan through a CD44-mediated mechanism. Treatment of the cultured segments with either Streptomyces hyaluronidase or hyaluronan hexasaccharides inhibited lacunae expansion. These observations demonstrate that hyaluronan-mediated mechanisms play an important role in controlling normal skeletal lengthening.  相似文献   

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