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1.
Normal adult human articular cartilage in organ culture secretes proteoglycan subunits that cannot initially interact in a normal manner with hyaluronic acid unless the latter is present at high concentrations and a neutral pH is employed. However, if the newly secreted subunit is allowed to mature in the cartilage matrix for up to 12 h, then its ability to interact is indistinguishable from that of its more mature counterparts. This conversion does not take place if the proteoglycan subunits are incubated in dilute solutions in the absence of the cartilage, and it is prevented by culturing at low temperature. The newly secreted proteoglycan subunits can, however, be induced to interact with hyaluronic acid by the presence of link proteins. The complex formed by these three components cannot be dissociated in the presence of hyaluronic acid oligosaccharides, suggesting a normal aggregate configuration. It is thus possible that proteoglycan aggregate formation within the cartilage is initially mediated by the presence of link proteins, which induce a conformational change with the hyaluronic acid-binding region of the proteoglycan subunits, although additional modification may be necessary to render any such change irreversible.  相似文献   

2.
Microfracture used to treat articular cartilage injuries can facilitate access to stem cells in the bone marrow and stimulate cartilage regeneration. However, the regenerated cartilage is fibrocartilage as opposed to hyaline articular cartilage and is thinner than native cartilage. Following microfracture in rabbit knee cartilage defects, application of hyaluronic acid gel resulted in regeneration of a thicker, more hyaline-like cartilage. The addition of transforming growth factor-β3, an inducer of chondrogenic differentiation in mesenchymal stem cells, to the treatment with microfracture and hyaluronic acid did not significantly benefit cartilage regeneration.  相似文献   

3.
Adult human articular cartilage contains a hyaluronic acid-binding protein of Mr 60 000-75 000, which contains disulphide bonds essential for this interaction. The molecule can compete with proteoglycan subunits for binding sites on hyaluronic acid, and can also displace proteoglycan subunits from hyaluronic acid if their interaction is not stabilized by the presence of link proteins. The abundance of this protein in the adult accounts for the reported inability to prepare high-buoyant-density proteoglycan aggregates from extracts of adult human cartilage [Roughley, White, Poole & Mort (1984) Biochem. J. 221, 637-644], whereas the deficiency of the protein in newborn human cartilage allows the normal recovery of proteoglycan aggregates from this tissue. The protein shares many common features with a hyaluronic acid-binding region derived by proteolytic treatment of a proteoglycan aggregate preparation, and this may also represent its origin in the cartilage, with its production increasing during tissue maturation.  相似文献   

4.
When normal adult dog articular cartilage was cultured in the presence of dibutyryl cyclic AMP a higher proportion than normal of newly synthesized 35S-labeled glycosaminoglycans was released from the tissue into the culture medium, although their net synthesis was not affected. In conjunction with this release of sulfated glycosaminoglycans, 24 times more [3H]glucosamine-labeled hyaluronic acid was released from the cartilage into the medium, and net hyaluronate synthesis was enhanced 3-fold. Virtually all of the newly synthesized hyaluronic acid in the medium was associated with proteoglycans. The proteoglycans in the medium of the dibutyryl cyclic AMP treated cultures were normal in hydrodynamic size and interacted normally with hyaluronic acid to form large aggregates. These results suggest that the increase in hyaluronate synthesis caused by dibutyryl cyclic AMP mayt have destabilized the interaction of proteoglycans with the collagen meshwork of the cartilage. The changes seen in normal adult articular cartilage after incubation with dibutyryl cyclic AMP, therefore, are similar to those which are observed in cartilage of osteoarthritic joints.  相似文献   

5.
Media harvested from cultures of glial cells grown in the presence of 35S-sulphate were shown to contain 35S-labelled proteoglycans. One of the components was a chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan that had an apparent monomer size similar to that of cartilage-derived chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan. The glial proteoglycan formed aggregates in the presence of hyaluronic acid; aggregation was abolished in the presence of deca- to tetradecasaccharides derived from hyaluronic acid or by previous reduction and alkylation of the proteoglycan. It is concluded that the ability to produce large chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan molecules capable of binding to hyaluronic acid is not confined to cartilage cells.  相似文献   

6.
The protein-keratan sulfate core of bovine nasal cartilage proteoglycan was purified by affinity chromatography on a column of immobilized hyaluronic acid. The hyaluronic acid was immobilized by reaction with a hydrazido-alkyl derivative of Sepharose in the presence of borohydride. Proteoglycan was digested with chondroitinase ABC and the entire mixture was passed over a column of the Sepharose-hyaluronic acid maintained at 4°C. After the digested chondroitin sulfate chains were washed from the column, the bound protein-keratan sulfate core was eluted with 4m guanidinium chloride. The protein-keratan sulfate core interacts with the affinity matrix through its hyaluronic acid binding site as shown by the inhibition of binding by free hyaluronic acid and hyaluronic acid decasaccharide.  相似文献   

7.
The chondrocyte is a specialized cell that synthesizes proteoglycans of a type found only in cartilage and nucleus pulposus. These proteoglycans are distinct in forming multiple aggregates of unique structure in which hyaluronic acid provides a central chain to which many proteoglycan molecules are bound at one end only. Chondrocytes were isolated from adult cartilage and used in suspension culture to test the effect of compounds in the medium on the synthesis of proteoglycans. Hyaluronic acid alone, among a number of compounds extracted from or analogous to those in cartilage, reduced the incorporation of [35S] sulphate into macromolecular material.Oligosaccharides of hyaluronic acid of the size of decasaccharides and above also had this effect but hyaluronic acid already bound to proteoglycan did not. The proportion of total labelled material associated with the cells increased at the expense of that in the medium. Treatment of the cells with trypsin abolished the effect of hyaluronic acid but treatment with chondroitinase did not. It is suggested that hyaluronic acid interacts with proteoglycans at the cell surface by a specific mechanism similar to that involved in proteoglycan aggregation, as a result of which the secretion and synthesis of proteoglycans is reduced.  相似文献   

8.
Twelve horses with traumatic arthritis were treated with intraarticular injection of hyaluronic acid mixed with cortisone and the results compared with 6 horses treated only with cortisone. There was a significantly better improvement in the group injected with a mixture of hyaluronic acid and cortisone. Further studies have given the same results in traumatic arthritis in horses if hyaluronic acid alone is injected. After injection of hyaluronic acid a large number of granulated monocytes appeared in the synovial fluid, but no inflammatory signs were observed. It is possible that this macrophage invasion is instrumental in producing improvement in the condition of the joint. The injected hyaluronic acid may also adhere to the surface of articular cartilage producing an “clastic cushion” protecting the cartilage surface. Experimental mechanical damage was also inflicted on the surface of articular cartilage in dogs and monkeys, and smoother healing was achieved if hyaluronic acid was injected into the joints after the damage. Injections of hyaluronic acid seem to be of value in treating traumatic arthritis or similar conditions.  相似文献   

9.
A chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan capable of forming large aggregates with hyaluronic acid was identified in cultures of human glial and glioma cells. The glial- cell- and glioma-cell-derived products were mutually indistinguishable and had some basic properties in common with the analogous chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan of cartilage: hydrodynamic size, dependence on a minimal size of hyaluronic acid for recognition, stabilization of aggregates by link protein, and precipitability with antibodies raised against bovine cartilage chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan. However, they differed in some aspects: lower buoyant density, larger, but fewer, chondroitin sulphate side chains, presence of iduronic acid-containing repeating units, and absence (less than 1%) of keratan sulphate. Apparently the major difference between glial/glioma and cartilage chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans relates to the glycan rather than to the protein moiety of the molecule.  相似文献   

10.
Summary To test the value ofStreptomyces hyaluronidase in carbohydrate histochemistry, the effects of digestion with the enzyme on the staining of cartilage and non-cartilaginous tissues by Alcian Blue (AB) pH 1.0, AB pH 2.5, high iron diamine, low iron diamine, aldehyde fuchsin, dialysed iron-ferrocyanide and AB pH 2.5-periodic acid-Schiff were studied by light microscopy. The results obtained lead to the conclusion that theStreptomyces enzyme releases not only hyaluronic acid but also chondroitin sulphates and keratan sulphates in cartilage. Since hyaluronic acid is known to be linked to chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans, the enzyme is of limited value in localizing hyaluronic acid in cartilage. However, it is useful in localizing hyaluronic acid in most non-cartilaginous tissues.  相似文献   

11.
Both hyaluronic acid and fibronectin localizations were examined in the upper surface layer of rat mandibular condylar cartilages by immunohistochemical techniques. Their delicate structure was successfully preserved by preparation procedures of joint condyles with disks. Paraformaldehyde-fixed cartilaginous tissues were cut in a cryostat, and cryosections were analyzed using streptavidin-peroxidase and indirect immunofluorescence methods. Another immunogold method with conventional preparation procedures and a quick-freezing method was performed for their ultrastructural analyses. Both hyaluronic acid-binding protein and anti-fibronectin antibody were used to localize hyaluronic acid and fibronectin in the mandibular condylar cartilage, respectively. Some cryosections were pre-treated with hyaluronidase and chondroitinase before such labeling. The upper surface layer was composed of double laminar structures. One bordered with the cartilage matriceal surface, which was positive for fibronectin. The hyaluronic acid was localized over the fibronectin layer. Therefore, the hyaluronic acid in vivo was bound with fibronectin in the cartilaginous matrix, performing lubrication for the mandibular joint movement.  相似文献   

12.
A low buoyant density fraction (A4) was isolated from human cartilage by CsCl density gradient ultracentrifugation. This fraction contained a hydrodynamically small proteoglycan (Kav, 0.74 on Sepharose CL-2B) that reacted with monoclonal antibody 12/20/1C6 specific for the hyaluronic acid binding region (G1 globe) of the large aggregating high-density proteoglycan isolated from many animal cartilages. Despite the presence of the hyaluronic acid binding region, this small proteoglycan did not form proteoglycan aggregates with hyaluronan, not even in the presence of link protein.  相似文献   

13.
1. Proteoglycan aggregates from bovine nasal cartilage were studied by using electron microscopy of proteoglycan/cytochrome c monolayers. 2. The aggregates contained a variably long central filament of hyaluronic acid with an average length of 1037nm. The proteoglycan monomers attached to the hyaluronic acid appeared as side chain filaments varying in length (averaging 249nm). They were distributed along the central filament at an average distance of about 36nm. 3. Chondroitin sulphate side chains were removed from the proteoglycan monomers of the aggregates by partial chondroitinase digestion. The molecules obtained had the same general appearance as intact aggregates. 4. Proteoglycan aggregates were treated with trypsin and the largest fragment, which contains the hyaluronic acid, link protein and hyaluronic acid-binding region, was recovered and studied with electron microscopy. Filaments that lacked the side chain extensions and had the same length as the central filament in the intact aggregate were observed. 5. Hyaluronic acid isolated after papain digestion of cartilage extracts gave filaments with similar length and size distribution as observed for the central filament both in the intact aggregate and in the trypsin digests. 6. Umbilical-cord hyaluronic acid was also studied and gave electron micrographs similar to those described for hyaluronic acid from cartilage. However, the length of the filament was somewhat shorter. 7. The electron micrographs of both intact and selectively degraded proteoglycans corroborate the current model of cartilage proteoglycan structure.  相似文献   

14.
High-buoyant-density proteoglycan aggregates could not be prepared from extracts of adult human cartilage by associative CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation with a starting density of 1.68 g/ml, even though proteoglycan subunits, hyaluronic acid and link proteins were all present. In contrast, aggregates could be prepared when extracts of neonatal human cartilage or bovine nasal cartilage were subjected to the same procedure. This phenomenon did not appear to be due to a defect within the hyaluronic acid-binding region of the adult proteoglycan subunit, but rather to an interference in the stability of the interaction between the proteoglycan subunit and hyaluronic acid towards centrifugation. The factor responsible for this instability was shown to reside within the low-density cartilage protein preparation obtained by direct dissociative CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation of the adult cartilage extract.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Natural polymers offer various advantages in cartilage tissue engineering applications, thanks to their intrinsic bioactivity and adaptability, which can be exploited for the optimization of scaffold properties. In particular, silk fibroin has multifunctional features driven by the self-assembly of molecular subunits in appropriate environmental conditions. For these reasons, it was used in combination with hyaluronic acid to produce porous sponges for cartilage regeneration. The added amount of hyaluronic acid and the cross-linking with genipin modulated scaffold properties in a synergistic way, showing a strong inter-correlation among macroscopic and microscopic characteristics. Interestingly, hyaluronic acid affected silk fibroin conformation and induced a physical separation between the two material components in absence of genipin. Instead, this was prevented by the cross-linking reaction, resulting in a more interspersed network of protein and polysaccharide molecules partially resembling the structure of cartilage extracellular matrix. In addition, the systematic evaluation of sponge properties and how they can be modulated will represent a significant starting point for the interpretation of the complex outcomes driven by the scaffold in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
Antibodies directed against whole bovine nasal-cartilage proteoglycan and against the hyaluronic acid-binding region and chondroitin sulphate peptides from the same molecule were used in immunodiffusion and immunoelectromigration experiments. Proteoglycans from bovine nasal and tracheal cartilage showed immunological identity, with all three antisera. Proteoglycans from pig hip articular cartilage, dog hip articular cartilage, human tarsal articular cartilage and rat chondrosarcoma reacted with all the antisera and showed immunological identity with the corresponding structures isolated from bovine nasal-cartilage proteoglycans. In contrast, proteoglycans from rabbit articular cartilage, rabbit nasal cartilage and cultured chick limb buds did not react with the antibodies directed against the hyaluronic acid-binding region, though reacting with antibodies raised against whole proteoglycan monomer and against chondroitin sulphate peptides. All the proteoglycans gave two precipitation lines with the anti-(chondroitin sulphate peptide) antibodies. Similarly, the proteoglycans reacting with the anti-(hyaluronic acid-binding region) antibodies gave two precipitation lines. The results indicate the presence of at least two populations of aggregating proteoglycan monomers in cartilage. The relative affinity of the antibodies for cartilage proteoglycans and proteoglycan substructures from various species was determined by radioimmunoassay. The affinity of the anti-(hyaluronic acid-binding region) antibodies for the proteoglycans decreased in the order bovine, dog, human and pig cartilage. Rat sternal-cartilage and rabbit articular-cartilage proteoglycans reacted weakly, whereas chick limb-bud and chick sternal-cartilage proteoglycans did not react. In contrast, the affinity of antibodies to chondroitin sulphate peptides for proteoglycans increased in the order bovine cartilage, chick limb bud and chick sternal cartilage, dog cartilage, rat chondrosarcoma, human cartilage, pig cartilage, rat sternal cartilage and rabbit cartilage.  相似文献   

18.
Hyaluronic acid in cartilage and proteoglycan aggregation   总被引:30,自引:23,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
1. Dissociation of purified proteoglycan aggregates was shown to release an interacting component of buoyant density higher than that of the glycoprotein-link fraction of Hascall & Sajdera (1969). 2. This component, which produced an increase in hydrodynamic size of proteoglycans on gel chromatography, was isolated by ECTEOLA-cellulose ion-exchange chromatography and identified as hyaluronic acid. 3. The effect of pH of extraction showed that the proportion of proteoglycan aggregates isolated from cartilage was greatest at pH4.5. 4. The proportion of proteoglycans able to interact with hyaluronic acid decreased when extracted above or below pH4.5, whereas the amount of hyaluronic acid extracted appeared constant from pH3.0 to 8.5. 5. Sequential extraction of cartilage with 0.15m-NaCl at neutral pH followed by 4m-guanidinium chloride at pH4.5 was shown to yield predominantly non-aggregated and aggregated proteoglycans respectively. 6. Most of the hyaluronic acid in cartilage, representing about 0.7% of the total uronic acid, was associated with proteoglycan aggregates. 7. The non-aggregated proteoglycans were unable to interact with hyaluronic acid and were of smaller size, lower protein content and lower keratan sulphate content than the disaggregated proteoglycans. Together with differences in amino acid composition this suggested that each type of proteoglycan contained different protein cores.  相似文献   

19.
A quick-freezing and deep-etching method in combination with replica immunoelectron microscopy was applied for examining localization of hyaluronic acid and fibronectin on the upper surface layer of rat mandibular condylar cartilage. Rat temporomandibular joints were dissected with articular disks in order to leave the articular cartilage surface intact. The disks were slightly cut with razor blades for exposing the condylar articular cartilage surface. They were quickly frozen with the isopentane-propane cryogen (–193°C) and prepared for freeze-fracturing and deep-etching replica membranes. They were additionally treated with 5% SDS and 0.5% collagenase to keep some antigens attached on the replica membranes. After such a treatment, a routine immunogold method was applied for clarifying the localization of hyaluronic acid and fibronectin in the upper surface layer. Small immunogold particles for hyaluronic acid were mainly localized around upper filamentous networks covered with amorphous materials, but large immunogold ones for fibronectin were localized on deep thicker fibrils. We have revealed the native architecture of the upper surface layer of mandibular condylar cartilage on the replica membranes and also three-dimensional localization of hyaluronic acid and fibronectin by the immunogold method.  相似文献   

20.
1. Analysis of the purified proteoglycans extracted from normal human articular cartilage with 4M-guanidinium chloride showed that there was an age-related increase in their content of protein and keratan sulphate. 2. The hydrodynamic size of the dissociated proteoglycans also decreased with advancing age, but there was little change in the proportion that could aggregate. 3. Results suggested that some extracts of aged-human cartilage had an increased content of hyaluronic acid compared with specimens from younger patients. 4. Dissociated proteoglycans, from cartilage of all age groups, bind to hyaluronic acid and form aggregates in direct proportion to the hyaluronic acid concentration. 5. Electrophoretic heterogeneity of the dissociated proteoglycans was demonstrated on polyacrylamide/agarose gels. The number of proteoglycan species observed was also dependent on the age of the patient.  相似文献   

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