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1.
Fibroblasts in culture were incubated with [3H]leucine and [35S]sulphate for 1-24 h. A large glucuronic acid-rich and a small iduronic acid-rich dermatan sulphate proteoglycan were isolated with the use of isopycnic density-gradient centrifugation, ion-exchange and gel chromatography. After 3 h the accumulation in the cell layer of the small proteoglycan reached a steady state, whereas the large one continued to increase, albeit more slowly. In the medium both proteoglycans accumulated 'linearly', although the large one appeared somewhat later than the small one. The composition of the polysaccharide chains and the size of the protein cores did not vary during the experiment. The two proteoglycans were synthesized at approximately similar rates, but were distributed differently in the culture. The small proteoglycan was mainly confined to the medium, whereas the large one was found in the medium as well as in a cell-associated pool. There was an intracellular accumulation of iduronic acid-rich dermatan sulphate as free polysaccharides.  相似文献   

2.
Human embryonic skin fibroblasts were pretreated with transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) for 6 h and then labeled with [35S]sulphate and [3H]leucine for 24 h. Radiolabeled proteoglycans from the culture medium and the cell layer were isolated and separated by isopycnic density-gradient centrifugation, followed by gel, ion-exchange and hydrophobic-interaction chromatography. The major proteoglycan species were examined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulphate before and after enzymatic degradation of the polysaccharide chains. The results showed that TGF-beta increased the production of several different 35S-labelled proteoglycans. A large chondroitin/dermatan sulphate proteoglycan (with core proteins of approximately 400-500 kDa) increased 5-7-fold and a small dermatan sulphate proteoglycan (PG-S1, also termed biglycan, with a core protein of 43 kDa) increased 3-4-fold both in the medium and in the cell layer. Only a small effect was observed on another dermatan sulphate proteoglycan, PG-S2 (also named decorin). These observations are generally in agreement with results of other studies using similar cell types. In addition, we have found that the major heparan sulphate proteoglycan of the cell layer (protein core approximately 350 kDa) was increased by TGF-beta treatment, whereas all the other smaller heparan sulphate proteoglycans with protein cores from 250 kDa to 30 kDa appeared unaffected. To investigate whether TGF-beta also influences the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chain-synthesizing machinery, we also characterized GAGs derived from proteoglycans synthesized by TGF-beta-treated cells. There was generally no increase in the size of the GAG chains. However, the dermatan sulphate chains on biglycan and decorin from TGF-beta treated cultures contained a larger proportion of D-glucuronosyl residues than those derived from untreated cultures. No effect was noted on the 4- and 6-sulphation of the GAG chains. By the use of p-nitrophenyl beta-D-xyloside (an initiator of GAG synthesis) it could be demonstrated that chain synthesis was also enhanced in TGF-beta-treated cells (approximately twofold). Furthermore, the dermatan sulphate chains synthesized on the xyloside in TGF-beta-treated fibroblasts contained a larger proportion of D-glucuronosyl residues than those of the control. These novel findings indicate that TGF-beta affects proteoglycan synthesis both quantitatively and qualitatively and that it can also change the copolymeric structure of the GAG by affecting the GAG-synthesizing machinery. Altered proteoglycan structure and production may have profound effects on the properties of extracellular matrices, which can affect cell growth and migration as well as organisation of matrix fibres.  相似文献   

3.
Heparan sulphate and chondroitin/dermatan sulphate proteoglycans of human skin fibroblasts were isolated and separated after metabolic labelling for 48 h with 35SO4(2-) and/or [3H]leucine. The proteoglycans were obtained from the culture medium, from a detergent extract of the cells and from the remaining ''matrix'', and purified by using density-gradient centrifugation, gel and ion-exchange chromatography. The core proteins of the various proteoglycans were identified by electrophoresis in SDS after enzymic removal of the glycosaminoglycan side chains. Skin fibroblasts produce a number of heparan sulphate proteoglycans, with core proteins of apparent molecular masses 350, 250, 130, 90, 70, 45 and possibly 35 kDa. The major proteoglycan is that with the largest core, and it is principally located in the matrix. A novel proteoglycan with a 250 kDa core is almost entirely secreted or shed into the culture medium. Two exclusively cell-associated proteoglycans with 90 kDa core proteins, one with heparan sulphate and another novel one with chondroitin/dermatan sulphate, were also identified. The heparan sulphate proteoglycan with the 70 kDa core was found both in the cell layer and in the medium. In a previous study [Fransson, Carlstedt, Cöster & Malmström (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 5657-5661] it was suggested that skin fibroblasts produce a proteoglycan form of the transferrin receptor. However, the core protein of the major heparan sulphate proteoglycan now purified does not resemble this receptor, nor does it bind transferrin. The principal secreted proteoglycans are the previously described large chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan (PG-L) and the small dermatan sulphate proteoglycans (PG-S1 and PG-S2).  相似文献   

4.
Endosomal preparations from human osteosarcoma cells and from fibroblasts contain 51,000- and 26,000-Mr proteins which bind a small dermatan sulphate proteoglycan after SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and Western blotting. Binding can be inhibited by unlabelled proteoglycan core protein. The proteins co-precipitate with a proteoglycan core protein-antibody complex. Scatchard analysis of immobilized endosomal proteins yielded a KD of about 37 nM for the proteoglycan. In intact cells proteins of the same size can be found. They are sensitive to trypsinization. A 51,000-Mr protein is the predominant membrane protein with strong binding to immobilized dermatan sulphate proteoglycan. There are additional proteoglycan-binding proteins with Mr values of around 30,000 and 14,000 which are insensitive to trypsin treatment. In contrast with the 51,000- and 26,000-Mr proteins, they resist deoxycholate/Triton X-100 extraction several days after subcultivation.  相似文献   

5.
3T3-L1 fibroblasts were induced to differentiate to 3T3-L1 adipocytes by dexamethasone, isobutyl-methylxanthine, and insulin. To study how differentiation affects extracellular matrix production, the accumulation of proteoglycans was studied by labeling the 3T3-L1 cells with [35S]sulphate for 24 h. The labeled proteoglycans were isolated from the medium and cell layer extracts by anion-exchange chromatography. They were then taken to gel filtration chromatography on Superose 6 before or after chondroitin ABC lyase digestion. Hyaluronan was determined by radioimmunoassay. The rate of accumulation of proteoglycans and hyaluronan in the control 3T3-L1 fibroblasts increased with time whereas it decreased slightly in the age matched adipocytes where the differentiation had proceeded, as judged by the change of morphology and increase of the activity of the adipose conversion markers glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and hormone sensitive lipase. The main change noted was that the adipocytes accumulated 50-70% less amount of small proteoglycans (decorin) in the medium than the fibroblasts did. The amount of large chondroitin/dermatan sulphate proteoglycans was also decreased but to a considerably smaller extent (30%). In the cell layer, heparan sulphate proteoglycan decreased by 60% as compared with the control cells. Thus, the differentiation of 3T3-L1 fibroblasts into adipocytes, which changes the morphology and the function of the cells, is also accompanied by a decreased net production especially of proteoglycans typical of fibrous connective tissue.  相似文献   

6.
Dermatan sulphate proteoglycans were purified from juvenile human articular cartilage, with a yield of about 2 mg/g wet wt. of cartilage. Both dermatan sulphate proteoglycan I (DS-PGI) and dermatan sulphate proteoglycan II (DS-PGII) were identified and the former was present in greater abundance. The two proteoglycans could not be resolved by agarose/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, but could be resolved by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, which indicated average Mr values of 200,000 and 98,000 for DS-PGI and DS-PGII respectively. After digestion with chondroitin ABC lyase the Mr values of the core proteins were 44,000 for DS-PGI and 43,000 and 47,000 for DS-PGII, with the smaller core protein being predominant in DS-PGII. Sequence analysis of the N-terminal 20 amino acid residues reveals the presence of a single site for the potential substitution of dermatan sulphate at residue 4 of DS-PGII and two such sites at residues 5 and 10 for DS-PGI.  相似文献   

7.
35SO42(-)- and [3H]leucine-labelled proteoglycans were isolated from the medium and cell layer of human skin fibroblast cultures. Measures were taken to avoid proteolytic modifications during isolation by adding guanidinium chloride and proteolysis inhibitors immediately after harvest. The proteoglycans were purified and fractionated by density-gradient centrifugation, followed by gel and ion-exchange chromatography. Our procedure permitted the isolation of two major proteoglycan fractions from the medium, one large, containing glucuronic acid-rich dermatan sulphate chains, and one small, containing iduronic acid-rich ones. The protein core of the latter proteoglycan had an apparent molecular weight of 47000 as determined by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, whereas the protein core of the former was considerably larger. The major dermatan sulphate proteoglycan of the cell layer was similar to the large proteoglycan of the medium. Only small amounts of the iduronic acid-rich dermatan sulphate proteoglycan could be isolated from the cell layer. Instead most of the iduronic acid-rich glycans appeared as free chains. The heparan sulphate proteoglycans found in the cell culture were largely confined to the cell layer. This proteoglycan was of rather low buoyant density and seemed to contain a high proportion of protein. The major part of the heparan sulphate proteoglycan from the medium had a higher buoyant density and contained a smaller amount of protein.  相似文献   

8.
Eosinophil cationic protein (ECP), a highly basic protein secreted from eosinophilic granulocytes, has been shown to take part in the inflammatory reaction. The involvement of ECP in fibroblast activation was therefore investigated in cell culture. Production of proteoglycans, hyaluronan and collagen in the presence of ECP was measured after incorporation of radioactive precursors and separation into different proteoglycan classes using gel and ion exchange chromatography and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. Proteoglycan accumulation in the cell layer was increased two- to fivefold at an ECP-concentration of 10 micrograms/ml. No effect on collagen, other proteins or hyaluronan was noted. Furthermore, no effect was observed on cell proliferation. The increased proteoglycan accumulation could be inhibited by addition of heparin or of antibodies to ECP. The effect could not be mimicked by the two basic peptides protamine and poly-L-lysine, speaking in favor of specificity. The increase in proteoglycan material was seen exclusively in the intracellular pool. No change of proteoglycans in the medium or the cell surface-associated pool was noted. The increase in the cell layer was accounted for by a two- to fivefold increase in free chains of heparan sulfate and dermatan sulfate. No change was seen in the proteoglycan pattern. No effect on proteoglycan synthesis or on endocytosis was noted. The increased accumulation of polysaccharide was caused by inhibited degradation of glycosaminoglycans. The half-lives of large and small heparan sulfate proteoglycans/glycosaminoglycans and dermatan sulfate proteoglycans/glycosaminoglycans in the cell layer are increased four- to sevenfold. We conclude that ECP inhibits proteoglycan degradation in fibroblasts, which indicates a role for the eosinophil in generation of fibrosis.  相似文献   

9.
1. Proteoglycans were extracted from sclera with 4 M-guanidine hydrochloride in the presence of proteinase inhibitors and purified by ion-exchange chromatography and density-gradient centrifugation. 2. The entire proteoglycan pool was characterized by compositional analyses and by specific chemical (periodate oxidation) and enzymic (chondroitinases) degradations. The glycan moieties of the molecules were exclusively galactosaminoglycans (dermatan sulphate-chondroitin sulphate co-polymers). In addition, the preparations contained small amounts of oligosaccharides. 3. The scleral proteodermatan sulphates were fractionated into one larger (I) and one smaller (II) component by gel chromatography. Proteoglycan I was eluted in a more excluded position on gel chromatography in 0.5 M-sodium acetate than in 4.0 M-guanidine hydrochloride. Reduced and alkylated proteoglycan I was eluted in the same position (in 0.5 M-sodium acetate) as was the starting material (in 4.0 M-guanidine hydrochloride). The elution position of proteoglycan II was the same in both solvents. Proteoglycans I and II had s0 20,w values of 2.8 x 10(-13) and 2.2 x 10(-13) s respectively in 6.0 M-guanidine hydrochloride. 4. The two proteoglycans differed with respect to the nature of the protein core and the co-polymeric structure of their side chains. Also proteoglycan I contained more side chains than did proteoglycan II. The dermatan sulphate side chains of proteoglycan I were D-glucuronic acid-rich (80%), whereas those of proteoglycan II contained equal amounts of D-glucuronic acid and L-iduronic acid. Furthermore, the co-polymeric features of the side chains of proteoglycans I and II were different. The protein core of proteoglycan I was of larger size than that of proteoglycan II. The latter had an apparent molecular weight of 46 000 (estimated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis), whereas the former was greater than 100 000. In addition, the amino-acid composition of the two core preparations was different. 5. As proteoglycan I altered its elution position on gel chromatography in 4 M-guanidine hydrochloride compared with 0.5 M-sodium acetate it is proposed that a change in conformation or a disaggregation took place. If the latter hypothesis is favoured, aggregation may be due to self-association or mediated by an extrinsic molecule, e.g. hyaluronic acid.  相似文献   

10.
1. Two proteodermatan sulphate fractions (I and II) from bovine sclera were studied by gel chromatography, light-scattering and ultracentrifugation under various conditions. 2. Gel chromatography of proteoglycans in the absence or presence of hyaluronate was performed under associative conditions. No effect on the elution profile was noted. 3. Ultracentrifugation experiments (sedimentation-velocity and sedimentation-equilibrium) with proteoglycan I and II in 6 M-guanidine hydrochloride gave molecular weights (Mw) of 160000-220000 and 70000-100000 respectively. As the protein contents were 45% and 60% respectively, it may be calculated that proteoglycan I contained four to five side chains, whereas proteoglycan II contained one or two. Sedimentation-equilibrium runs performed in 0.15 M-NaCl gave an apparent molecular weight (Mw) of 500000-800000 for proteoglycan I and 90000-110000 for proteoglycan II. 4. In light-scattering experiments both proteoglycans I and II yielded high particle weights in 0.15 M-NaCl (3.1 X 10(6) and 3.4 X 10(6) daltons respectively). In the presence of 6 M-guanidine hydrochloride the molecular weights decreased to 410000 and 130000 respectively. The particle weights in 0.15 M-NaCl were not altered by the addition of hyaluronate or hyaluronate oligosaccharides. 5. The dermatan sulphate side chains of scleral proteoglycans (L-iduronate/D-glucuronate ratio 7:13) gave a particle weight of 100000 daltons in 0.15 M-NaCl. In 1.00 M-KCl/0.02M-EDTA the molecular weight was 24000. Addition of free scleral dermatan sulphate chains to a solution of proteoglycan II promoted further multimerization of the macromolecule.  相似文献   

11.
Maintenance of fibroblasts in 0.5% serum results in viable but non-proliferative cells that may be analogous to fibroblasts in vivo. The synthesis of proteoglycans by human embryo lung fibroblasts in Eagle's minimal essential medium with 0.5% newborn-bovine serum or with 10% serum has been compared. A similar amount of [35S]sulphate-labelled glycosaminoglycan per cell was secreted by fibroblasts in 10% or 0.5% serum. 35SO42-incorporation into sulphated glycosaminoglycans was enhanced in 0.5% serum when expressed per mg of cell protein, but [3H]glucosamine incorporation was decreased. The charge density of these glycosaminoglycans was not changed as determined by ion-exchange chromatography. It was concluded that decreased protein/ cell resulted in an apparent increase in 35S-labelled glycosaminoglycan synthesis/mg of cell protein, whereas decreased uptake of [3H]glucosamine resulted in a decrease in their glucosamine labelling. The proteoglycans secreted by fibroblasts in 0.5% serum were similar in glycosaminoglycan composition, chain length and buoyant density to the dermatan sulphate proteoglycan, which is the major secreted component of cells in 10% serum. Larger heparan sulphate and chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans, which comprise about 40% of the total secreted proteoglycans of cultures in 10% serum, were greatly diminished in the medium of cultures in 0.5% serum. The proteoglycan profile of medium from density-inhibited cultures in 10% serum resembles that of proliferating cultures, indicating that lack of proliferation was not responsible for the alteration. The dermatan sulphate proteoglycan, participating in extracellular matrix structure, may be the primary tissue product of lung fibroblasts in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Defensins represent an evolutionarily conserved group of small peptides with potent antibacterial activities. We report here that extracellular proteinases secreted by the human pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Enterococcus faecalis and Streptococcus pyogenes release dermatan sulphate by degrading dermatan sulphate-containing proteoglycans, such as decorin. Dermatan sulphate was found to bind to neutrophil-derived alpha-defensin, and this binding completely neutralized its bactericidal activity. During infection, proteoglycan degradation and release of dermatan sulphate may therefore represent a previously unknown virulence mechanism, which could serve as a target for novel antibacterial strategies.  相似文献   

13.
The characteristics of cell-associated proteoglycans were studied and compared with those from the medium in suspension cultures of calf articular-cartilage chondrocytes. By including hyaluronic acid or proteoglycan in the medium during [35S]sulphate labelling the proportion of cell-surface-associated proteoglycans could be decreased from 34% to about 15% of all incorporated label. A pulse-chase experiment indicated that this decrease was probably due to blocking of the reassociation with the cells of proteoglycans exported to the medium. Three peaks of [35S]sulphate-labelled proteoglycans from cell extracts and two from the medium were isolated by gel chromatography on Sephacryl S-500. These were characterized by agarose/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, by SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis of core proteins, by glycosaminoglycan composition and chain size as well as by distribution of glycosaminoglycans in proteolytic fragments. The results showed that associated with the cells were (a) large proteoglycans, typical for cartilage, apparently bound to hyaluronic acid at the cell surface, (b) an intermediate-size proteoglycan with chondroitin sulphate side chains (this proteoglycan, which had a large core protein, was only found associated with the cells and is apparently not related to the large proteoglycans), (c) a small proteoglycan with dermatan sulphate side chains with a low degree of epimerization, and (d) a somewhat smaller proteoglycan containing heparan sulphate side chains. The medium contained a large aggregating proteoglycan of similar nature to the large cell-associated proteoglycan and small proteoglycans with dermatan sulphate side chains with a higher degree of epimerization than those of the cells, i.e. containing some 20% iduronic acid.  相似文献   

14.
Endocytosis and subsequent degradation of iduronic acid-rich small dermatan sulfate proteoglycan from fibroblast secretions were studied in human fibroblasts. Upon endocytosis of [3H]leucine- and [35S]sulfate-labeled proteoglycan release of free leucine was 10 to 15 times more rapid than that of inorganic sulfate. Within approximately 3 h a steady state was approached between transport of proteoglycan to the compartment of core protein degradation and release of free leucine. No such steady state could be found with respect to the dermatan sulfate chains. In the presence of benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-Ala-diazomethylketone or of other SH-protease inhibitors the degradation of the protein moiety of endocytosed proteoglycan was much less inhibited than the degradation of the polysaccharide chain. Benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-Ala-diazomethylketone did not affect the degradation of dermatan sulfate chains taken up by fluid phase endocytosis and the activities of all known dermatan sulfate-degrading enzymes. Percoll gradient centrifugation indicated that also in the presence of the protease inhibitor the partially degraded proteoglycan accumulated in dense lysosomes. The isolation of intracellular dermatan sulfate peptides and molecular size determinations of endocytosed dermatan sulfate proteoglycan supported the conclusion that a critical proteolytic step is required before the dermatan sulfate chain becomes accessible to hydrolytic enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
A minor low-sulphated dermatan sulphate proteoglycan was isolated from ray skin by extraction with 2% sodium dodecyl sulphate, followed with ion-exchange chromatography, gel chromatography and density gradient centrifugation. The proteoglycan with a relative molecular mass (Mr) ranging from 70 to 120 kDa is composed of about two dermatan sulphate chains (Mr 33 kDa) bound on a protein core of Mr 27 kDa, and oligosaccharides consisting of uronic acids, hexosamines and neutral sugars. The major amino acids of the protein core were glycine (corresponding to about one-fourth of the total amino acids), serine, threonine, glutamic acid/glutamine, leucine and cysteine, together amounting to 56% of the total. The isolated proteoglycan does not interact with hyaluronic acid and does not form self-aggregates. Dermatan sulphate was rich in iduronic acid (62% of total uronic acid) and composed of non-sulphated (44%), and mono-sulphated disaccharides bearing esterified sulphate groups at positions C-4 (53%) or C-6 (3%) of the N-acetyl galactosamine. HPLC analysis of a pure preparation of dermatan sulphate, showed the presence of galactose and glucose possibly as branches on the dermatan sulphate chain.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The immunohistochemical localization of large proteoglycan and small proteoglycan was observed, using antibodies 2B1 and 6B6 (Sobueet al., 1988, 1989a), in fetal and adult pancreas and biliary system as well as in tumour tissues, obtained from 11 autopsies and 74 biopsies. The distribution of chondroitin 4- and 6-sulphate side chains, type I and IV collagen and elastin were also studied. In adult pancreas and all the biliary tracts examined, periductal fibrous tissues consisted mainly of dermatan sulphate small proteoglycan with networks of fibrous elements, which were composed of large proteoglycan, elastin, type I collagen and type IV collagen. In the interstitial components of cystadenoma of pancreas and biliary duct carcinoma, similar small proteoglycan-rich components were relatively abundant, although large proteoglycan was present in much larger amounts than that in non-neoplastic adult tissues. In some cholangiomas, the extra-and intracellular hyaline globules formed by the carcinoma cells were found to contain chondroitin sulphate large proteoglycan, laminin and fibronectin.The distribution of proteoglycans was observed to be different in the arterial walls of the interlobular tissues of the adult and the fetal pancreas. The biological significance of large and small proteoglycans in the interstitial connective tissues was discussed.  相似文献   

17.
It was previously shown that a citric acid buffer extract of human dermis (extract D) inhibited growth of human diploid fibroblasts in monolayer culture (Muir et al., 1997). Further fractionation has shown that the active principle is probably a proteoglycan, and that retention of its inhibitory activity is dependent on the use protease inhibitors throughout the extraction procedure. Elution of extract D from a DEAE-cellulose column produced four major peaks, each of which was subjected to SDS-PAGE as well as being tested for inhibitory activity on the growth of fibroblasts in culture. Peaks III and IV had no inhibitory effect, but peak I contained highly active material. Gels of this peak showed prominent bands of 120 kDa (corresponding to dermatan sulphate proteoglycan II, DS-PG II) and at 45 kDa (corresponding to the core protein). The latter band became more prominent when extract D which had been treated with chrondroitinase ABC was electrophoresed. Their identities were verified by Western blotting. Peak II also contained some slower-acting inhibitory material which has as yet to be identified, but contains little or no protein corresponding to the decorin core-protein. The data indicate that the intact decorin molecule, DS-PG II, is the main inhibitory principle in human skin.  相似文献   

18.
Proteoglycans were extracted from the adult human meniscus under dissociative conditions and purified by CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation. The preparations of highest density contained proteoglycan that possessed the ability to interact with hyaluronic acid, was of large subunit size and was composed of chondroitin sulphate, keratan sulphate and sialic acid-containing oligosaccharides. This 'cartilage-like' proteoglycan also exhibited subunit and aggregate structures analogous to those of hyaline-cartilage proteoglycans when examined by electron microscopy. However, the composition of this proteoglycan was more comparable with proteoglycans from immature cartilage than from age-matched cartilage. The preparations from lower density, which were enriched in dermatan sulphate, contained smaller proteoglycan that was not able to interact with hyaluronic acid. This non-aggregating proteoglycan may be structurally distinct from the 'cartilage-like' proteoglycan, which does not contain dermatan sulphate.  相似文献   

19.
Dermatan sulfate proteoglycans were isolated from adult bovine sclera and adult bovine articular cartilage. Their immunological relationships were studied by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays using polyclonal antibodies raised against the large and small dermatan sulfate proteoglycans from sclera and a polyclonal and monoclonal antibody directed against the small dermatan sulfate proteoglycans from cartilage. The small dermatan sulfate proteoglycans from sclera and cartilage displayed immunological cross-reactivity while there was no convincing evidence of shared epitope(s) with the larger dermatan sulfate proteoglycans, nor did these larger proteoglycans share any common epitopes with each other. A hyaluronic acid binding region was detected immunologically on the larger scleral dermatan sulfate proteoglycan but was absent from the larger dermatan sulfate proteoglycan of cartilage and both the small dermatan sulfate proteoglycans. These antibodies were used in immunofluorescence microscopy to localize the scleral proteoglycans and molecules containing these epitopes in the eye. The large scleral dermatan sulfate proteoglycan was restricted to sclera while molecules related to the small scleral and cartilage proteoglycans were found in the sclera, anterior uveal tract, iris, and cornea. Amino acid sequencing of the amino-terminal regions of the core proteins of the small dermatan sulfate proteoglycans from sclera and articular cartilage showed that all the first 14 amino acids analyzed were identical and the same as reported earlier for the small bovine skin and tendon dermatan sulfate proteoglycans. These studies demonstrate that the larger dermatan sulfate proteoglycans of sclera and cartilage are chemically unrelated to each other and to the smaller dermatan sulfate proteoglycans isolated from these tissues. The latter have closely related core proteins and probably represent a molecule with a widespread distribution in which the degree of epimerization of glucuronic acid and iduronic acid varies between tissues.  相似文献   

20.
Tyrosine O-sulfate ester in proteoglycans   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tyrosine O-sulfate residues were detected in the protein core of sulfated proteoglycans. When cultured skin fibroblasts and arterial smooth muscle cells were incubated in the presence of [35S]sulfate, dermatan sulfate proteoglycan and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan isolated from the culture medium contained tyrosine [35S]sulfate ester which accounted for 0.03%-0.82% of total 35S radioactivity incorporated into the sulfated proteoglycans. This corresponds to a tyrosine sulfation of every second (fibroblasts) and every 10th (smooth muscle cells) dermatan sulfate proteoglycan molecule. [3H]Tyrosine labeling of fibroblast dermatan sulfate proteoglycan gave a similar stoichiometry. However, the relative proportion of tyrosine [35S]sulfate in proteoglycans from arterial tissue was about 10 times higher than in that from cultured arterial cells. Pulse chase experiments with [35S]sulfate revealed that tyrosine sulfation is a late event in the biosynthesis of dermatan sulfate proteoglycan from fibroblasts and occurs immediately prior to secretion. Cultured skin fibroblasts from a patient with a progeroid variant (Kresse et al. 1987, Am. J. Hum. Gen. 41, 436-453) which exhibit a partial deficiency to synthesize dermatan sulfate proteoglycan were shown to form and to secrete a tyrosine-sulfated but glycosaminoglycan-free protein core, thus confirming a selective and independent [35S]sulfate labeling of the protein core.  相似文献   

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