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1.
During endochondral bone formation, hypertrophic cartilage is replaced by bone or by a marrow cavity. The matrix of hypertrophic cartilage contains at least one tissue-specific component, type X collagen. Structurally type X collagen contains both a collagenous domain and a COOH-terminal non-collagenous one. However, the function(s) of this molecule have remained largely speculative. To examine the behavior and functions of type X collagen within hypertrophic cartilage, we (Chen, Q., E. Gibney, J. M. Fitch, C. Linsenmayer, T. M. Schmid, and T. F. Linsenmayer. 1990. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 87:8046-8050) recently devised an in vitro system in which exogenous type X collagen rapidly (15 min to several hours) moves into non-hypertrophic cartilage. There the molecule becomes associated with preexisting cartilage collagen fibrils. In the present investigation, we find that the isolated collagenous domain of type X collagen is sufficient for its association with fibrils. Furthermore, when non-hypertrophic cartilage is incubated for a longer time (overnight) with "intact" type X collagen, the molecule is found both in the matrix and inside of the chondrocytes. The properties of the matrix of such type X collagen-infiltrated cartilage become altered. Such changes include: (a) antigenic masking of type X collagen by proteoglycans; (b) loss of the permissiveness for further infiltration by type X collagen; and (c) enhanced accumulation of proteoglycans. Some of these changes are dependent on the presence of the COOH-terminal non-collagenous domain of the molecule. In fact, the isolated collagenous domain of type X collagen appears to exert an opposite effect on proteoglycan accumulation, producing a net decrease in their accumulation, particularly of the light form(s) of proteoglycans. Certain of these matrix alterations are similar to ones that have been observed to occur in vivo. This suggests that within hypertrophic cartilage type X collagen has regulatory as well as structural functions, and that these functions are achieved specifically by its two different domains.  相似文献   

2.
Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy were used in conjunction with a monoclonal antibody to investigate the localization of type X collagen in the proximal tibial growth plate of 7-d-old chicks. This molecule was detected throughout the hypertrophic zone first appearing when chondrocytes exhibited hypertrophy: it was absent from the proliferative zone. Type X collagen was primarily associated with type II collagen fibrils as demonstrated by immunogold staining. Type X collagen was not concentrated in the focal calcification sites nor was it associated with matrix vesicles. These observations suggest that type X collagen may play a role other than that directly related to the nucleation of calcification.  相似文献   

3.
To examine the regulation of collagen types IX and X during the hypertrophic phase of endochondral cartilage development, we have employed in situ hybridization and immunofluorescence histochemistry on selected stages of embryonic chick tibiotarsi. The data show that mRNA for type X collagen appears at or about the time that we detect the first appearance of the protein. This result is incompatible with translational regulation, which would require accumulation of the mRNA to occur at an appreciably earlier time. Data on later-stage embryos demonstrate that once hypertrophic chondrocytes initiate synthesis of type X collagen, they sustain high levels of its mRNA during the remainder of the hypertrophic program. This suggests that these cells maintain their integrity until close to the time that they are removed at the advancing marrow cavity. Type X collagen protein in the hypertrophic matrix also extends to the marrow cavity. Type IX collagen is found throughout the hypertrophic matrix, as well as throughout the younger cartilaginous matrices. But the mRNA for this molecule is largely or completely absent from the oldest hypertrophic cells. These data are consistent with a model that we have previously proposed in which newly synthesized type X collagen within the hypertrophic zone can become associated with type II/IX collagen fibrils synthesized and deposited earlier in development (Schmid and Linsenmayer, 1990; Chen et al. 1990).  相似文献   

4.
The distribution, supramolecular form, and arrangement of collagen types I and V in the chicken embryo corneal stroma were studied using electron microscopy, collagen type-specific monoclonal antibodies, and a preembedding immunogold method. Double-label immunoelectron microscopy with colloidal gold-tagged monoclonal antibodies was used to simultaneously localize collagen type I and type V within the chick corneal stroma. The results definitively demonstrate, for the first time, that both collagens are codistributed within the same fibril. Type I collagen was localized to striated fibrils throughout the corneal stroma homogeneously. Type V collagen could be localized only after pretreatment of the tissue to partially disrupt collagen fibril structure. After such pretreatments the type V collagen was found in regions where fibrils were partially dissociated and not in regions where fibril structure was intact. When pretreated tissues were double labeled with antibodies against types I and V collagen coupled to different size gold particles, the two collagens colocalized in areas where fibril structure was partially disrupted. Antibodies against type IV collagen were used as a control and were nonreactive with fibrils. These results indicate that collagen types I and V are assembled together within single fibrils in the corneal stroma such that the interaction of these collagen types within heterotypic fibrils masks the epitopes on the type V collagen molecule. One consequence of the formation of such heterotypic fibrils may be the regulation of corneal fibril diameter, a condition essential for corneal transparency.  相似文献   

5.
Selected stages of the developing chicken cornea have been examined for type VI collagen, employing monoclonal antibodies specific for this molecule. By immunofluorescence, the molecule is not detectable in 5 1/2 day corneas, a time at which the epithelial-derived, acellular primary stroma is the only corneal matrix present. One day later, the presumptive stromal fibroblasts have invaded this stroma and have initiated synthesis of the secondary (mature) stroma. By that time, a strong fluorescent signal for the type VI collagen molecule is detectable throughout the stroma. It is present in all subsequent ages examined. The molecule is not restricted to the cornea, and is present in most stromal matrices examined, including those of the sclera, eyelid, and nictitating membrane. Immunoelectron microscopy was also performed, utilizing a colloidal gold-labeled secondary antibody. These data show that the type VI collagen is not a component of the striated collagen fibrils, but instead is assembled in the form of thin filaments. The monoclonal antibody bound to the filaments at periodic intervals of about 100 nm.  相似文献   

6.
Immunohistochemical studies of the chick columella have shown that the extracellular matrix of this ossicular cartilage template is composed largely of type II collagen. As development proceeds, synthesis of type X collagen, a hypertrophic cartilage-specific molecule, is initiated by endochondral chondrocytes within the zone of cartilage cell hypertrophy. Subsequently, these cells and their surrounding extracellular matrix are removed, resulting in marrow cavity formation. We have examined which of these processes are programmed within the columella chondrocytes themselves, and which require involvement of exogenous factors. Prehypertrophic columella from 12-day chick embryos were grown either in organ culture on Nuclepore filters or as explants on the chorioallantoic membrane of host embryos. Chondrocytes from the same source were grown in monolayer cell cultures. In both organ culture and cell culture, chondrocytes developed to the stage at which some of them entered the hypertrophic program and initiated the production of type X collagen as determined by immunofluorescence histochemistry with a monoclonal antibody specific for that collagen type. The organ cultures, however, did not progress to the next stage, in which detectable removal of the type X collagen-containing matrix occurs. When identical columella were grown on the chorioallantoic membrane of host chicks, the type X collagen-containing matrix which formed was rapidly removed, resulting in the formation of a marrow cavity. Thus, progression of endochondral chondrocytes to the deposition of type X collagen-containing matrix seems to be programmed within the cells themselves. Subsequent removal of this matrix requires the involvement of exogenous factors.  相似文献   

7.
Monoclonal antibodies to chick type X collagen have been used to study the structure, biosynthesis, and location of type X in cartilage. The antibodies were produced by injecting purified type X collagen into female SJL/J mice and then fusing their spleen cells with Sp2/0 myeloma cells. Hybridoma culture supernatants were screened for antibodies to type X collagen by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and Western blots. Positive supernatants did not cross-react with other collagen types (I, II, IX, XI) or with fibronectin. Three monoclonal antibodies were chosen for further characterization. Two of them (1A6 and 6F6) recognize a pepsin-sensitive domain of type X collagen. Rotary shadowing showed that 1A6 and 6F6 both recognize the same end of type X, probably the aminoterminal non-triple helical domain. Amino acid sequencing of the intact protein and of the epitope-containing peptide confirmed that the antibody recognition sites for 1A6 and 6F6 are within the amino-terminal domain. Monoclonal antibody 2B3 reacts with the pepsinized (45 kDa) and weakly with the nonpepsinized (59 kDa) forms of type X collagen. The monoclonal antibodies were used for immunolocalization of type X in hypertrophic chondrocytes and reacted only with tissue samples from areas undergoing endochondral ossification, e.g. growth plate and fracture callus. Antibody 6F6, when coupled to Sepharose, selectively binds to type X collagen from cell and organ cultures. In a pulse-chase experiment, no processing of the 59-kDa form of type X could be detected. Two components with molecular masses of approximately 70 and 85 kDa, arising from a disulfide-bonded aggregate, were synthesized by both the permanent and calcifying cartilage organ cultures but did not react with the antibody, suggesting that these proteins are not related to type X. In summary, the pulse-chase results and the immune precipitation with monoclonal antibody 6F6 did not detect biosynthetic precursors larger than 59 kDa or proteolytically processed forms of type X.  相似文献   

8.
A unique morphological feature of the embryonic avian cornea is the uniformity of its complement of striated collagen fibrils, each of which has a diameter of 25 nm. We have asked whether this apparent morphological uniformity also reflects an inherent uniformity of the structural and physical properties of these fibrils. For this we have examined the in situ thermal stability of the type I collagen within these fibrils. Corneal tissue sections were reacted at progressively higher temperatures with conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies directed against the triple-helical domain of the type I collagen molecule. These studies show that the cornea contains layers of collagen fibrils with greater than average stability. The two most prominent of these extend uninterrupted across the entire width of the cornea, and then appear to insert into thick bundles of scleral collagen, which in turn appear to insert into the scleral ossicles, a ring of bony plates which circumscribe the sclera of the avian eye. Once formed, the bands may act to stabilize the shape of the cornea or, conversely, to alter it during accommodation.  相似文献   

9.
Type II procollagen is expressed as two splice forms. One form, type IIB, is synthesized by chondrocytes and is the major extracellular matrix component of cartilage. The other form, type IIA, contains an additional 69 amino acid cysteine-rich domain in the NH2-propeptide and is synthesized by chondrogenic mesenchyme and perichondrium. We have hypothesized that the additional protein domain of type IIA procollagen plays a role in chondrogenesis. The present study was designed to determine the localization of the type IIA NH2-propeptide and its function during chondrogenesis. Immunofluorescence histochemistry using antibodies to three domains of the type IIA procollagen molecule was used to localize the NH2-propeptide, fibrillar domain, and COOH-propeptides of the type IIA procollagen molecule during chondrogenesis in a developing human long bone (stage XXI). Before chondrogenesis, type IIA procollagen was synthesized by chondroprogenitor cells and deposited in the extracellular matrix. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed type IIA procollagen fibrils labeled with antibodies to NH2-propeptide at approximately 70 nm interval suggesting that the NH2-propeptide remains attached to the collagen molecule in the extracellular matrix. As differentiation proceeds, the cells switch synthesis from type IIA to IIB procollagen, and the newly synthesized type IIB collagen displaces the type IIA procollagen into the interterritorial matrix. To initiate studies on the function of type IIA procollagen, binding was tested between recombinant NH2-propeptide and various growth factors known to be involved in chondrogenesis. A solid phase binding assay showed no reaction with bFGF or IGF-1, however, binding was observed with TGF-beta1 and BMP-2, both known to induce endochondral bone formation. BMP-2, but not IGF-1, coimmunoprecipitated with type IIA NH2-propeptide. Recombinant type IIA NH2-propeptide and type IIA procollagen from media coimmunoprecipitated with BMP-2 while recombinant type IIB NH2-propeptide and all other forms of type II procollagens and mature collagen did not react with BMP-2. Taken together, these results suggest that the NH2-propeptide of type IIA procollagen could function in the extracellular matrix distribution of bone morphogenetic proteins in chondrogenic tissue.  相似文献   

10.
Conditions were defined for promoting cell growth, hypertrophy, and extracellular matrix mineralization of a culture system derived from embryonic chick vertebral chondrocytes. Ascorbic acid supplementation by itself led to the hypertrophic phenotype as assessed by respective 10- and 15-fold increases in alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity and type X synthesis. Maximal extracellular matrix mineralization was obtained, however, when cultures were grown in a nutrient-enriched medium supplemented with both ascorbic acid and 20 mM beta-glycerophosphate. Temporal studies over a 3-wk period showed a 3-4-fold increase in DNA accompanied by a nearly constant DNA to protein ratio. In this period, total collagen increased from 3 to 20% of the cell layer protein; total calcium and phosphorus contents increased 15-20-fold. Proteoglycan synthesis was maximal until day 12 but thereafter showed a fourfold decrease. In contrast, total collagen synthesis showed a greater than 10-fold increase until day 18, a result suggesting that collagen synthesis was replacing proteoglycan synthesis during cellular hypertrophy. Separate analysis of individual collagen types demonstrated a low level of type I collagen synthesis throughout the 21-d time course. Collagen types II and X synthesis increased during the first 2 wk of culture; thereafter, collagen type II synthesis decreased while collagen type X synthesis continued to rise. Type IX synthesis remained at undetectable levels throughout the time course. The levels of collagen types I, II, IX, and X mRNA and the large proteoglycan core protein mRNA paralleled their levels of synthesis, data indicating pretranslational control of synthesis. Ultrastructural examination revealed cellular and extracellular morphology similar to that for a developing hypertrophic phenotype in vivo. Chondrocytes in lacunae were surrounded by a well-formed extracellular matrix of randomly distributed collagen type II fibrils (approximately 20-nm diam) and extensive proteoglycan. Numerous vesicular structures could be detected. Cultures mineralized reproducibly and crystals were located in extracellular matrices, principally associated with collagen fibrils. There was no clear evidence of mineral association with extracellular vesicles. The mineral was composed of calcium and phosphorus on electron probe microanalysis and was identified as a very poorly crystalline hydroxyapatite on electron diffraction. In summary, these data suggest that this culture system consists of chondrocytes which undergo differentiation in vitro as assessed by their elevated levels of alkaline phosphatase and type X collagen and their ultrastructural appearance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,121(5):1181-1189
Previous work from our laboratories has demonstrated that: (a) the striated collagen fibrils of the corneal stroma are heterotypic structures composed of type V collagen molecules coassembled along with those of type I collagen, (b) the high content of type V collagen within the corneal collagen fibrils is one factor responsible for the small, uniform fibrillar diameter (25 nm) characteristic of this tissue, (c) the completely processed form of type V collagen found within tissues retains a large noncollagenous region, termed the NH2- terminal domain, at the amino end of its alpha 1 chain, and (d) the NH2- terminal domain may contain at least some of the information for the observed regulation of fibril diameters. In the present investigation we have employed polyclonal antibodies against the retained NH2- terminal domain of the alpha 1(V) chain for immunohistochemical studies of embryonic avian corneas and for immunoscreening a chicken cDNA library. When combined with cDNA sequencing and molecular rotary shadowing, these approaches provide information on the molecular structure of the retained NH2-terminal domain as well as how this domain might function in the regulation of fibrillar structure. In immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy analyses, the antibodies against the NH2-terminal domain react with type V molecules present within mature heterotypic fibrils of the corneal stroma. Thus, epitopes within at least a portion of this domain are exposed on the fibril surface. This is in marked contrast to mAbs which we have previously characterized as being directed against epitopes located in the major triple helical domain of the type V molecule. The helical epitopes recognized by these antibodies are antigenically masked on type V molecules that have been assembled into fibrils. Sequencing of the isolated cDNA clones has provided the conceptual amino acid sequence of the entire amino end of the alpha 1(V) procollagen chain. The sequence shows the location of what appear to be potential propeptidase cleavage sites. One of these, if preferentially used during processing of the type V procollagen molecule, can provide an explanation for the retention of the NH2-terminal domain in the completely processed molecule. The sequencing data also suggest that the NH2-terminal domain consists of several regions, providing a structure which fits well with that of the completely processed type V molecule as visualized by rotary shadowing.  相似文献   

12.
The corneal stroma of the chick embryo is deposited in two steps. The primary stroma is laid down by the corneal epithelium and it contains type I, type II and type IX collagens. Its formation is subsequent to the presumptive epithelial cells' migration onto the lens capsule (which is rich in type IV collagen). The secondary, ultimate stroma is synthesized by fibroblasts whcih, on day 5 of development, invade the swollen primary stroma. It is composed of a matrix of thin (25 nm), regular fibrils containing type I and type V collagens.We found that a chick corneal epithelium isolated from either a 6-day or a 14-day embryo was able to produce, in vitro, stroma-containing type I collagen fibrils. However, the amount of collagen deposited and its organization were highly dependent on the substratum used. Plastic or purified bovine type I collagen substrata led to the release of very few fibrils. Purified human type IV collagen induced the production of an abundant matrix made of large irregular collagen fibrils.When compared to native corneal stroma, there were two aspects in which this matrix differed: (1) it contained only type I collagen, as shown by indirect immunofluorescence, and (2) there were numerous large, irregular fibrils of about 100 to 130 nm in diameter.In conclusion, it is suggested that purified type IV collagen substitutes, in part, for the basement membrane and allows the production of a corneal stroma-like matrix by an embryonic corneal epithelium in culture. This production is possible even with a 14-day epithelium which, in vivo, is no more involved in the synthesis of the stroma collagens. Moreover, the regulatory effect of type II collagen, previously suggested by in vivo observations, may be confirmed in this in vitro system by the appearance of large fibrils in the newly deposited stroma that are made only by type I collagen.  相似文献   

13.
In this study we describe the collagen pattern synthesized by differentiating fetal human chondrocytes in vitro and correlate type X collagen synthesis with an intracellular increase of calcium and with matrix calcification. We show that type II collagen producing fetal human epiphyseal chondrocytes differentiate in suspension culture over agarose into hypertrophic cells in the absence of ascorbate, in contrast to chicken chondrocytes which have been shown to require ascorbate for hypertrophic differentiation. Analysis of the collagen synthesis by metabolic labeling and immunoprecipitation as well as by immunofluorescence double staining with anti type I, II or X collagen antibodies revealed that type X collagen synthesis was initiated during the third week. After 4 weeks culture over agarose we identified cells staining for both type I and X collagen, indicating further differentiation of chondrocytes to a new type of 'post-hypertrophic' cell. This cell type, descending from a type X collagen producing chondrocyte, is different from the previously described 'dedifferentiated' or 'modulated' types I and III collagen producing cell derived from a type II collagen producing chondrocyte. The appearance of type I collagen synthesis in agarose cultures was confirmed by metabolic labeling and immunoprecipitation and challenges the current view that the chondrocyte phenotype is stable in suspension cultures. An increase in the intracellular calcium concentration from 100 to 250 nM was measured about one week after onset of type X collagen synthesis. First calcium deposits were detected by alizarine red S staining in type X collagen positive cell nodules after 4 weeks, again in the absence of ascorbate. From these observations we conclude a sequence of events ultimately leading to matrix calcification in chondrocyte nodules in vitro that begins with chondrocyte hypertrophy and the initiation of type X collagen synthesis, followed by the increase of intracellular calcium, the deposition of calcium mineral, and finally by the onset of type I collagen synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Monoclonal antibodies were produced against the recently described short chain cartilage collagen (type X collagen), and one (AC9) was extensively characterized and used for immunohistochemical localization studies on chick tissues. By competition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, antibody AC9 was observed to bind to an epitope within the helical domain of type X collagen and did not react with the other collagen types tested, including the minor cartilage collagens 1 alpha, 2 alpha, 3 alpha, and HMW-LMW. Indirect immunofluorescence analyses with this antibody were performed on unfixed cryostat sections from various skeletal and nonskeletal tissues. Only those of skeletal origin showed detectable reactivity. Within the cartilage portion of the 13-d-old embryonic tibiotarsus (a developing long bone) fluorescence was observed only in that region of the diaphysis containing hypertrophic chondrocytes. None was detectable in adjacent regions or in the epiphysis. Slight fluorescence was also present within the surrounding sleeve of periosteal bone. Consistent with these results, the antibody did not react with the cartilages of the trachea and sclera, which do not undergo hypertrophy during the stages examined. It did, however, lightly react with the parietal bones of the head, which form by intramembranous ossification. These results are consistent with our earlier biochemical analyses, which showed type X collagen to be a product of that subpopulation of chondrocytes that have undergone hypertrophy. In addition, either it or an immunologically cross-reactive molecule is also present in bone, and exhibits a diminished fluorescent intensity as compared with hypertrophic cartilage.  相似文献   

15.
The distribution of type I, II, IX, XI and X collagens in and close to areas of asbestoid (amianthoid) fibers in thyroid cartilages of various ages was investigated in this study. Asbestoid fibers were first detected in thyroid cartilage from a 3-year-old male child. Areas of asbestoid fibers functionally appear to serve as guide rails for vascularization of thyroid cartilage. Alcian blue staining in the presence of 0.3 M MgCl2 revealed a loss of glycosaminoglycans in areas of asbestoid fibers. In addition, the fibers reacted positively with antibodies against collagen types II, IX and XI, but showed no staining with antibodies to collagen types I and X. Territorial matrix of adjacent chondrocytes showed the same staining pattern. In addition to staining for type II, IX and XI collagens, asbestoid fibers showed strong immunostaining for type I collagen after puberty but not for type X collagen. However, groups of chondrocytes within areas of asbestoid fibers reacted strongly with antibodies to type X collagen, suggesting that this collagen plays an important role in matrix of highly differentiated chondrocytes. The finding that these type X collagen-positive chondrocytes also revealed immunostaining for type I collagen confirms previous studies showing that hypertrophic chondrocytes can further differentiate into cells that are characterized by the synthesis of type X and I collagens.  相似文献   

16.
Fibronectin and collagens are major constituents of the cell matrix of fibroblasts. Fibronectin is a 220,000 dalton glycoprotein that mediates a variety of adhesive functions of cells examined in vitro. Fibronectin is secreted in a soluble form and interacts with collagen to form extracellular filaments. Fibronectin and procollage type I were localized using the peroxidase anti-peroxidase method. Under standard culture conditions, fibronectin and procollagen were localized to non-periodic 10 nm extracellular fibrils, the cell membrane and plasma membrane vesicles. Ascorbate treatment of cells leads to a new larger fibril with a diameter of approximately 40 nm. Antibodies to fibronectin and procollagen I react to these native collagen fibrils with an axial periodicity of approximately 70 nm. Fibronectin is clearly associated with native collagen fibrils produced by ascorbate treated cells and there is an asymetric distribution or segregation of fibronectin on these collagen fibrils with a 70 nm axial repeat.  相似文献   

17.
A 32-wk-gestation female with type II achondrogenesis-hypochondrogenesis has been studied. The clinical features were typical, and radiographs revealed short ribs, hypoplastic ilia, absence of ossification of sacrum, pubis, ischia, tali, calcanei, and many vertebral bodies; the long bones were short with mild metaphyseal flaring. The femoral cylinder index was 6.3. Comparison with previous cases placed the patient toward the mild end of the achondrogenesis-hypochondrogenesis spectrum (Whitley-Gorlin prototype IV). Light microscopy revealed hypercellular cartilage with decreased matrix traversed by numerous fibrous vascular canals. The growth plate was markedly abnormal. Ultrastructural studies revealed prominently dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum containing a fine granular material with occasional fibrils in all chondrocytes. Immunohistologic studies indicated irregular large areas of cartilage matrix staining with monoclonal antibody to human type III collagen. The relative intensity of matrix staining for type II collagen appeared diminished. More striking, however, were intense focal accumulations of type II collagen within small rounded perinuclear structures of most chondrocytes but not other cell types. These results strongly suggest intracellular retention of type II collagen within vacuolar structures, probably within the dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum observed in all chondrocytes by electron microscopy (EM), and imply the presence of an abnormal, poorly secreted type II collagen molecule. Biochemical studies (see companion paper) suggest that this patient had a new dominant lethal disorder caused by a structural abnormality of type II collagen.  相似文献   

18.
The mandibular condyle from 20-day-old rats was examined in the electron microscope with particular attention to intracellular secretory granules and extracellular matrix. Moreover, type II collagen was localized by an immunoperoxidase method. The condyle has been divided into five layers: (1) the most superficial, articular layer, (2) polymorphic cell layer, (3) flattened cell layer, (4) upper hypertrophic, and (5) lower hypertrophic cell layers. In the articular layer, the cells seldom divide, but in the polymorphic layer and upper part of the flattened cell layer, mitosis gives rise to new cells. In these layers, cells produce two types of secretory granules, usually in distinct stacks of the Golgi apparatus; type a, cylindrical granules, in which 300-nm-long threads are packed in bundles which appear "lucent" after formaldehyde fixation; and type b, spherical granules loaded with short, dotted filaments. The matrix is composed of thick banded "lucent" fibrils in a loose feltwork of short, dotted filaments. The cells arising from mitosis undergo endochondral differentiation, which begins in the lower part of the flattened cell layer and is completed in the upper hypertrophic cell layer; it is followed by gradual cell degeneration in the lower hypertrophic cell layer. The cells produce two main types of secretory granules: type b as above; and type c, ovoid granules containing 300-nm-long threads associated with short, dotted filaments. A possibly different secretory granule, type d, dense and cigar-shaped, is also produced. The matrix is composed of thin banded fibrils in a dense feltwork. In the matrix of the superficial layers, the "lucency" of the fibrils indicated that they were composed of collagen I, whereas the "lucency" of the cylindrical secretory granules suggested that they transported collagen I precursors to the matrix. Moreover, the use of ruthenium red indicated that the feltwork was composed of proteoglycan; the dotted filaments packed in spherical granules were similar to, and presumably the source of, the matrix feltwork. The superficial layers did not contain collagen II and were collectively referred to as perichondrium. In the deep layers, the ovoid secretory granules displayed collagen II antigenicity and were likely to transport precursors of this collagen to the matrix, where it appeared in the thin banded fibrils. That these granules also carried proteoglycan to the matrix was suggested by their content of short dotted filaments. Thus the deep layers contained collagen II and proteoglycan as in cartilage; they were collectively referred to as the hyaline cartilage region.  相似文献   

19.
We have examined whether the production of hypertrophic cartilage matrix reflecting a late stage in the development of chondrocytes which participate in endochondral bone formation, is the result of cell lineage, environmental influence, or both. We have compared the ability of cultured limb mesenchyme and mesectoderm to synthesize type X collagen, a marker highly selective for hypertrophic cartilage. High density cultures of limb mesenchyme from stage 23 and 24 chick embryos contain many cells that react positively for type II collagen by immunohistochemistry, but only a few of these initiate type X collagen synthesis. When limb mesenchyme cells are cultured in or on hydrated collagen gels or in agarose (conditions previously shown to promote chondrogenesis in low density cultures), almost all initiate synthesis of both collagen types. Similarly, collagen gel cultures of limb mesenchyme from stage 17 embryos synthesize type II collagen and with some additional delay type X collagen. However, cytochalasin D treatment of subconfluent cultures on plastic substrates, another treatment known to promote chondrogenesis, induces the production of type II collagen, but not type X collagen. These results demonstrate that the appearance of type X collagen in limb cartilage is environmentally regulated. Mesectodermal cells from the maxillary process of stages 24 and 28 chick embryos were cultured in or on hydrated collagen gels. Such cells initiate synthesis of type II collagen, and eventually type X collagen. Some cells contain only type II collagen and some contain both types II and X collagen. On the other hand, cultures of mandibular processes from stage 29 embryos contain chondrocytes with both collagen types and a larger overall number of chondrogenic foci than the maxillary process cultures. Since the maxillary process does not produce cartilage in situ and the mandibular process forms Meckel's cartilage which does not hypertrophy in situ, environmental influences, probably inhibitory in nature, must regulate chondrogenesis in mesectodermal derivatives. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The thermal stability of the helical domain of intracellular and matrix-associated type X collagen was examined in situ within the hypertrophic region of embryonic chick vertebral cartilages. For this we employed indirect immunofluorescence histochemistry of unfixed tissue sections reacted at progressively higher temperatures (Linsenmayer et al., J cell biol 99 (1984) 1405) with a conformation-dependent monoclonal antibody (X-AC9) (Schmid & Linsenmayer, J cell biol 100 (1985) 598). The hypertrophic chondrocytes which had most recently initiated synthesis of type X did not immediately secrete it, but instead retained it intracellularly within cytoplasmic organelles. This allowed for clear visualization of the intracellular type X. Within the pool of intracellular type X collagen, the epitope recognized by the antibody was stable up to 55 degrees C, but was destroyed at 60 degrees C. This is 5-10 degrees C higher than the thermal stability of the epitope when the molecule is in neutral solution (as determined by competition ELISA). The matrix-associated type X collagen is stable at least to 65-67.5 degrees C. We conclude that in situ the stability of the collagen helix in its normal intracellular environment is considerably greater than might be predicted from measurements made on molecules in solution.  相似文献   

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