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1.
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   

2.
The cell surface proteoglycan fraction isolated by mild trypsin treatment of NMuMG mouse mammary epithelial cells contains largely heparan sulfate, but also 15-24% chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans. We conclude that this fraction contains a unique hybrid proteoglycan bearing both heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans because (i) the proteoglycan behaves as a single species by sizing, ion exchange and collagen affinity chromatography, and by isopycnic centrifugation, even in the presence of 8 M urea or 4 M guanidine hydrochloride, (ii) the behavior of the chondroitin sulfate in these separation techniques is affected by heparan sulfate-specific probes and vice versa, and (iii) proteoglycan core protein bearing both heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate is recognized by a single monoclonal antibody. Removal of both types of glycosaminoglycan reduces the proteoglycan to a core protein of approximately 53 kDa. The proteoglycan fraction is heterogeneous in size, largely due to a variable number and/or length of the glycosaminoglycan chains. We estimate that one or two chondroitin sulfate chains (modal Mr of 17,000) exist on the proteoglycan for every four heparan sulfate chains (modal Mr of 36,000). Synthesis of these chains is reportedly initiated on an identical trisaccharide that links the chains to the same amino acid residues on the core protein. Therefore, some regulatory information, perhaps residing in the amino acid sequence of the core protein, must determine the type of chain synthesized at any given linkage site. Post-translational addition of these glycosaminoglycans to the protein may provide information affecting its ultimate localization. It is likely that the protein is directed to specific sites on the cell surface because of the ability of the glycosaminoglycans to recognize and bind extracellular components.  相似文献   

3.
We have recently shown that the large hyaluronan-aggregating chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan from cartilage (PG-LA) is unfavorable as a substrate for neural crest cell migration in vitro and that this macromolecule inhibits cell dispersion on fibronectin substrates when included in the medium (R. Perris and S. Johansson, 1987, J. Cell Biol. 105, 2511-2521). In this study we present data on the specificity of the migration-repressing activity of PG-LA and data on the molecular mechanisms by which the proteoglycan might impair neural crest cell motility. Soluble PG-LA potently impaired cell migration on substrates of laminin/laminin-nidogen, vitronectin, and collagen types I, III, IV, and VI. When tested in solid-phase binding assays, PG-LA bound avidly to substrates of collagen types I-III and V. Conversely, minimal amounts of the proteoglycan bound to substrates of laminin-nidogen, vitronectin, collagen types IV and VI, and fibronectin or to a proteolytic fragment encompassing its cell-binding domain (105 kDa). Preincubation of these substrates with soluble PG-LA prior to plating of the cells had no effect on their locomotory behavior. These results indicate that PG-LA affects neural crest cell movement primarily through an interaction with the cell surface, rather than by association with the cell motility-promoting substrate molecules. The molecular interaction of soluble PG-LA with neural crest cells was further examined by analyzing the effects of isolated domains of the proteoglycan on cell migration on fibronectin. Addition of chondroitin sulfate chains, the core protein free of glycosaminoglycans, the isolated hyaluronan-binding region (HABr), or a proteolytic fragment corresponding to the keratan sulfate-enriched domain of the PG-LA to neural crest cells migrating on fibronectin or the 105-kDa fibronectin fragment had no significant effect on their motility. After reduction and alkylation, PG-LA was considerably less efficient in perturbing cell movement on fibronectin substrates and virtually ineffective in altering migration on the 105-kDa fragment. In the presence of hyaluronan fragments of 16-30 monosaccharides in length, or an antiserum against the HABr, the migration repressing activity of PG-LA was reduced in a dose-dependent fashion. Furthermore, the inhibitory action of PG-LA was significantly reduced by treatment of the cells with Streptomyces hyaluronidase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Perlecan (Pln) is a large proteoglycan that can bear HS (heparan sulfate) and chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycans. Previous studies have demonstrated that Pln can interact with growth factors and cell surfaces either via its constituent glycosaminoglycan chains or core protein. Herein, we summarize studies demonstrating spatially and temporally regulated expression of Pln mRNA and protein in developing and mature cartilage. Mutations either in the Pln gene or in genes involved in glycosaminoglycan assembly result in severe cartilage phenotypes seen in both human syndromes and mouse model systems. In vitro studies demonstrate that Pln can trigger chondrogenic differentiation of multipotential mouse CH310T1/2 stem cells as well as maintain the phenotype of adult human chondrocytes. Structural mapping indicates that these activities lie entirely within domain I, a region unique to Pln, and that they require glycosaminoglycans. We also discuss data indicating that Pln cooperates with the key chondrogenic growth factor, BMP-2, to promote expression of hypertrophic chondrocyte markers. Collectively, these studies indicate that Pln is an important component of human cartilage and may have useful applications in tissue engineering and cartilage-directed therapeutics.  相似文献   

5.
When slices of adult rabbit articular cartilage were incubated in culture medium, the rate of incorporation of [35S]sulphate or [3H]acetate into glycosaminoglycans increased 4-8 fold during the first 5 days of incubation. Similar changes in biosynthetic activity were observed during culture of adult bovine cartilage. The activation of synthesis was not serum-dependent, but appeared to be a result of the depletion of tissue proteoglycan that occurs under these incubation conditions [Sandy, Brown & Lowther (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 543, 536--544]. Thus, although complete activation was observed in serum-free medium, it was not observed if the cartilage was cultured inside dialysis tubing or in medium containing added proteoglycan subunit. The average molecular size of the proteoglycans synthesized by activated tissue was slightly larger than normal, as determined by chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B, and the average molecular size of the glycosaminoglycans synthesized by activated tissue was markedly increased over the normal. The increase in chain size was accompanied by an increase in the proportion of the chains degraded by chondroitinase ABC; these results are consistent with the preferential synthesis by activated chondrocytes of chondroitin sulphate-rich proteoglycans. The increase in glycosaminoglycan chain size was observed whether the chains were formed on endogenous core protein or on exogenous benzyl-beta-D-zyloside. An approximate 4-fold activation in culture of glycosaminoglycan synthesis on protein core was accompanied by a 1.54-fold increase in the rate of incorporation of [3H]serine into the chondroitin sulphate-linkage region of the proteoglycans. A 2.8-fold activation in culture of glycosaminoglycan synthesis on benzyl-beta-D-zyloside was accompanied by a 1.7-fold increase in the rate of incorporation of [3H]benzyl-beta-D-zyloside into glycosaminoglycans. The activation of glycosaminoglycan synthesis was, however, accompanied by no detectable change in the activity of xylosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.26) in cell-free extracts. These results are discussed in relation to current ideas on the control of proteoglycan synthesis in cartilage.  相似文献   

6.
Application of 2-aminopyridine fluorescence labeling to glycosaminoglycans   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A pyridylamination method was applied to glycosaminoglycans and the characteristics of the resulting pyridylamino glycosaminoglycans were examined. First, glycosaminoglycan chains, which uniformly possess a xylose residue at their reducing termini, were liberated from proteoglycan by successive digestion with protease and endo-beta-xylosidase. Then the glycosaminoglycan chains were coupled with 2-aminopyridine by reductive amination with sodium cyanoborohydride for 15 h according to the method of Hase, S. et al. [J. Biochem. 95, 197-203 (1984)]. The pyridylamination reaction caused neither depolymerization, de-N-acetylation, nor de-N- or de-O-sulfation. The pyridylamino glycosaminoglycan chains had an intact linkage region (GlcA-Gal-Gal-Xyl) between the carbohydrate chain and the peptide core of the proteoglycan. These pyridylamino glycosaminoglycans should be useful as substrates for endo-type glycosidases that act on glycosaminoglycan chains and as markers for studies of glycosaminoglycan metabolism.  相似文献   

7.
Two dermatan sulphate-containing proteoglycans from bovine sclera were examined by rotary shadowing and electron microscopy, and the results were compared with previous biochemical findings. Both the large iduronate-poor proteoglycan (PGI) and the small iduronate-rich proteoglycan (PGII) possessed a globular proteinaceous region. Whereas PGI had a branched extension from the globular region, with five to eight side chains attached to it, PGII had only a single tail, which was of glycosaminoglycuronan. PGII aggregated via globular-region interactions, which were much diminished by reduction and alkylation. PGI aggregated via side chains and globular-region interactions. Although a few PGI aggregates were large, and similar to the hyaluronan-cartilage proteoglycan aggregates [Weidemann, Paulsson, Timpl, Engel & Heinegård (1984) Biochem. J. 224, 331-333], hyaluronan did not cause enhanced aggregation. PGII is very similar in shape to the small cartilage chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan, whereas PGI somewhat resembles the large cartilage chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan, although with many fewer glycosaminoglycan side chains, and probably only one globular region as opposed to two in the cartilage proteoglycan.  相似文献   

8.
K M Keller  P R Brauer  J M Keller 《Biochemistry》1989,28(20):8100-8107
Swiss mouse 3T3 cells, when grown in the presence of 5 mM chlorate, an inhibitor of PAPS synthesis, produce heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains containing only about 8% of the sulfate normally present and which have lost the ability to bind to fibronectin. These undersulfated chains are sensitive to nitrous acid at pH 4.5, indicating that many glucosaminyl residues have unsubstituted amino groups. The iduronic acid content of the heparan sulfate produced in the presence of chlorate is reduced to less than 7% as compared to the 36% in that from untreated cells. The chlorate-treated cells do not demonstrate any alterations in their growth control. However, the spreading behavior of these cells is altered to a flat rounded morphology compared to the more typical fibroblastic appearance of the untreated cell. The sulfation of chondroitin chains is also inhibited, but at a lower chlorate concentration which does not alter growth control or the spreading ability of the cells. These data indicate that (a) 3T3 cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan is not involved in growth control but may be involved in cell spreading, (b) the use of chlorate should be a valuable method for the study of the biosynthesis and structure/function relationships of sulfated glycosaminoglycans, and (c) the temporal sequence of the heparan sulfate chain modification reactions predicted from results of studies with cell-free extracts also operates in the cell.  相似文献   

9.
Incorporation of radiolabeled sulfate into glycosaminoglycans is a widely accepted assay to measure the rate of proteoglycan synthesis. Although glycosaminoglycan synthesis is dependent on the quantity of inorganic sulfate available to proteoglycan synthesizing cells, 'sulfate free' medium is regularly used in studies regarding proteoglycan synthesis. In this study murine patellar cartilage glycosaminoglycans synthesized under 'sulfate free' conditions were compared with those synthesized at physiological sulfate concentration. Under 'sulfate free' conditions synthesis was not only decreased but low sulfated glycosaminoglycans were made that were not synthesized during incubation at physiological sulfate concentration. The use of 'sulfate free' medium should be avoided in proteoglycan synthesis studies.  相似文献   

10.
Numerous functions of heparan sulfate proteoglycans are mediated through interactions between their heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains and extracellular ligands. Ligand binding specificity for some molecules, including many growth factors, is determined by complex heparan sulfate fine structure, where highly sulfated, iduronate-rich domains alternate with N-acetylated domains. Syndecan-4, a cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycan, has a distinct role in cell adhesion, suggesting its chains may differ from those of other cell surface proteoglycans. To determine whether the specific role of syndecan-4 correlates with a distinct heparan sulfate structure, we have analyzed heparan sulfate chains from the different surface proteoglycans of a single fibroblast strain and compared their ability to bind the Hep II domain of fibronectin, a ligand known to promote focal adhesion formation through syndecan-4. Despite distinct molecular masses of glypican and syndecan glycosaminoglycans and minor differences in disaccharide composition and sulfation pattern, the overall proportion and distribution of sulfated regions and the affinity for the Hep II domain were similar. Therefore, adhesion regulation requires core protein determinants of syndecan-4.  相似文献   

11.
A homogeneous preparation of catabolin from pig leucocytes caused a reversible dose-dependent (0.01-1 nM) decrease in the synthesis of proteoglycan in slices of pig articular cartilage cultured in serum-free medium. The monomers that were synthesized and secreted in the presence of catabolin had the same average hydrodynamic size and ability to aggregate as the controls, and the core protein was substituted with the same number of glycosaminoglycan chains. The chains were the same average length and charge as normal and were sulphated to the same extent as the controls. Newly synthesized extracellular proteoglycan was not preferentially degraded. A 2-3-fold increase in glycosaminoglycan synthesis occurred in control and catabolin-treated cartilage in the presence of beta-D-xyloside (1 mM), more than 80% being secreted into the medium as free chains. Decreased incorporation of sulphate was not reversed in the presence of lysosomal-enzyme inhibitors, and there was no evidence in pulse-chase experiments of increased intracellular degradation of glycosaminoglycan chains before secretion. It is concluded that catabolin-treated cartilage synthesizes a smaller number of normal proteoglycan molecules.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of porcine endothelial-cell-conditioned medium on proteoglycan synthesis by pig aorta smooth muscle cells was studied under serum-free conditions. Maximal stimulation of [35S]-sulfate incorporation (50%) into medium-secreted and cell layer proteoglycans was observed after 20 min and 4 h incubation, respectively. This stimulation can be explained neither by increased secretion nor by oversulfation of medium-secreted [35S]-labeled proteoglycans. Those [35S]-proteoglycans secreted (for 24 h) in the presence of endothelial cell-conditioned medium were characterized by a higher hydrodynamic size than those secreted in the presence of control medium, without modification of glycosaminoglycan chain length. Agreement between the stimulation of incorporation of [35S]-sulfate into glycanic chains (50.1%) and [14C]-serine residues associated with glycosaminoglycans (49.9%) involved an increase in the number of glycanic chains linked to protein cores. The lesser stimulation of [14C]-serine incorporation into secreted proteins (18%) suggested that stimulation of glycosaminoglycan synthesis was not the direct consequence of enhanced protein synthesis. Proteoglycan synthesis was studied in the presence of para-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xyloside. Fractionation of medium-secreted [35S]-proteoglycans and xyloside-initiated glycosaminoglycans revealed that stimulation of [35S]-glycosaminoglycan protein core acceptor for glycanic chain initiation. Our results suggest that the factor(s) secreted by endothelial cells are able to modify smooth muscle cell proteoglycan synthesis by stimulating the first step of protein core glycosylation. This stimulation was accompanied by an increase in proteoglycan hydrodynamic size.  相似文献   

13.
Inactivation of the perlecan gene leads to perinatal lethal chondrodysplasia. The similarity to the phenotypes of the Col2A1 knock-out and the disproportionate micromelia mutation suggests perlecan involvement in cartilage collagen matrix assembly. We now present a mechanism for the defect in collagen type II fibril assembly by perlecan-null chondrocytes. Cartilage perlecan is a heparin sulfate or a mixed heparan sulfate/chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan. The latter form binds collagen and accelerates fibril formation in vitro, with more defined fibril morphology and increased fibril diameters produced in the presence of perlecan. Interestingly, the enhancement of collagen fibril formation is independent on the core protein and is mimicked by chondroitin sulfate E but neither by chondroitin sulfate D nor dextran sulfate. Furthermore, perlecan chondroitin sulfate contains the 4,6-disulfated disaccharides typical for chondroitin sulfate E. Indeed, purified glycosaminoglycans from perlecan-enriched fractions of cartilage extracts contain elevated levels of 4,6-disulfated chondroitin sulfate disaccharides and enhance collagen fibril formation. The effect on collagen assembly is proportional to the content of the 4,6-disulfated disaccharide in the different cartilage extracts, with growth plate cartilage glycosaminoglycan being the most efficient enhancer. These findings demonstrate a role for perlecan chondroitin sulfate side chains in cartilage extracellular matrix assembly and provide an explanation for the perlecan-null chondrodysplasia.  相似文献   

14.
Mouse mammary epithelial cells (NMuMG cells) deposit at their basal surfaces an extracellular heparan sulfate-rich proteoglycan that binds to type I collagen. The binding of the purified proteoglycan to collagen was studied by (i) a solid phase assay, (ii) a suspension assay using preformed collagen fibrils, and (iii) a collagen fibril affinity column. The binding interaction occurs at physiological pH and ionic strength and can be inhibited only by salt concentrations that greatly exceed those found physiologically. Binding requires the intact proteoglycan since the protein-free glycosaminoglycan chains will not bind under the conditions of these assays. However, binding is mediated through the heparan sulfate chains as it can be inhibited by block-sulfated polysaccharides, including heparin. Binding requires native collagen structure which may be optimal when the collagen is in a fibrillar configuration. Binding sites on collagen fibrils are saturable, high affinity (Kd approximately 10(-10) M), and selective for heparin-like glycosaminoglycans. Because a culture substratum of type I collagen fibrils causes NMuMG cells to accumulate heparan sulfate proteoglycan into a basal lamina-like layer, binding of heparan sulfate proteoglycans to type I collagen may lead to the formation of a basal lamina and may link the basal lamina to the connective tissue matrix, an association found in basement membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate proteoglycans are distinguished by differences in their proportion of d-glucuronosyl and l-iduronosyl residues, the latter being formed by chondroitin-glucuronate 5-epimerase during or after glycosaminoglycan chain polymerization. To investigate the influence of the core protein on the extent of epimerization, we expressed chimeric proteins in 293 HEK cells constructed from intact or modified Met(1)-Gln(153) of decorin (DCN), which normally has a single dermatan sulfate chain at Ser(34), in combination with intact or modified Leu(241)-Ser(353) of CSF-1, which has a chondroitin sulfate attachment site at Ser(309). Transfected DCN(M1-Q153), like full-length DCN, contained approximately 20% l-iduronate. Conversely, transfected CSF-1(L241-S353), attached C-terminally on the DCN prepropeptide, contained almost exclusively d-glucuronate. Transfected intact chimeric DCN(M1-Q153)-CSF-1(L241-S353), with two glycosaminoglycan chains, also contained almost exclusively d-glucuronate in chains at both sites, as did chimeras in which alanine was substituted for serine at either of the glycosaminoglycan attachment sites. Nevertheless, undersulfated intact chimeric proteoglycan was an effective substrate for epimerization of glucuronate to iduronate residues when incubated with microsomal proteins and 3'-phosphoadenylylphosphosulfate. C-terminal truncation constructs were prepared from the full-length chimera with an alanine substitution at the CSF-1 glycosaminoglycan attachment site. Transfected truncations retaining the alanine-blocked site contained chains with essentially only glucuronate, whereas those further truncated by 49 or more amino acids and missing the modified attachment site contained chains with approximately 15% iduronate. This 49-amino acid region contains a 7-amino acid motif that appears to be conserved in several chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans. The results are consistent with a model in which the core protein, possibly via this motif, is responsible for routing to subcellular compartments with or without sufficient access to chondroitin-glucuronate 5-epimerase for the addition of chains with or without iduronate residues, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Endothelial cells derived from human pulmonary arteries incorporate (3H)-glucosamine and 35SO4 into glycosaminoglycans and into the carbohydrate side chains of glycoproteins. These 3H/35S-carbohydrate chains were isolated from cells and culture medium after Pronase digestion. The 3H/35S-glycosaminoglycans were separated from the 3H/35S glycopeptides by chromatography on Sephadex G-50. The distribution of cellular glycosaminoglycans and glycopeptides indicated that 30–60% of the cellular 35S-glycopeptides may be associated with the matrix components that are synthesized by the cell and attached to a plastic substratum. Human pulmonary arterial endothelial cells were grown on collagen or on a matrix derived from vascular smooth muscle cells in order to investigate how smooth muscle cell extracellular matrix components may regulate the synthesis of endothelial cell glycoconjugates. Endothelial cells grown on plastic release various proportions of the glycoconjugates they synthesize into the culture medium. However, these same cells, when grown on substratum composed of extracellular matrix materials, synthesized altered proportions of cell-associated glycosaminoglycans and reduced the levels of total glycosaminoglycans they released into the culture medium. Thus the growth of endothelial cells on a matrix of smooth muscle cell components indicates that the glycosaminoglycan materials released into the culture medium by cells grown on a plastic substratum may not be an accurate reflection of the levels or composition of extracellular matrix materials made by endothelial cells in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of cell culture age and concomitant changes in cell density on the biosynthesis of sulfated-proteoglycan by rabbit articular chondrocytes in secondary monolayer culture was studied. Low density (LD, 2 d), middle density (MD, 5-7 d), and high density (HD, 12-15 d) cultures demonstrated changes in cellular morphology and rates of DNA synthesis. DNA synthesis was highest at LD to MD densities, but HD cultures continued to incorporate [3H]-thymidine. LD cultures incorporated 35SO4 into sulfated-proteoglycans at a higher rate than MD or LD cultures. The qualitative nature of the sulfated-proteoglycans synthesized at the different culture ages were analyzed by assessing the distribution of incorporated 35SO4 in associative and dissociative CsCl density gradients and by elution profiles on Sepharose CL-2B. Chondrocytes deposited into the extracellular matrix (cell-associated fraction) 35SO4-labeled proteoglycan aggregate. More aggregated proteoglycan was found in the MD and HD cultures than at LD. A 35SO4-labeled aggregated proteoglycan of smaller hydrodynamic size than that found in the cell-associated fraction was secreted into the culture medium at each culture age. The proteoglycan monomer (A1D1) of young and older cultures had similar hydrodynamic sizes at all cell culture ages and cell densities. The glycosaminoglycan chains of A1D1 were hydrodynamically larger in the younger LD cultures than in the older HD cultures and consisted of only chondroitin 6 and 4 sulfate chains. A small amount of chondroitin 4,6 sulfate was detected, but no keratan sulfate was measured. The A1D2 fractions of young LD cultures contained measurable amounts of dermatan sulfate; no dermatan sulfate was found in older MD or HD cultures. These studies indicated that chondrocytes at LD synthesized a proteoglycan monomer with many of the characteristics of young immature articular cartilage of rabbits. These results also indicated that rapidly dividing chondrocytes were capable of synthesizing proteoglycans which form aggregates with hyaluronic acid. Culture age and cell density appears primarily to modulate the synthesis of glycosaminoglycan types and chain length. Whether or not these glycosaminoglycans are found on the same or different core proteins remains to be determined.  相似文献   

18.
The metabolism of cell-associated proteoglycans, labeled in the glycosaminoglycan portion with 35SO2-4, was studied in normal skin fibroblasts (SL66 cells), NH4Cl-treated SL66 fibroblasts, and in I-cells derived from patients with mucolipidosis II. Kinetic data from label-chase experiments and gel filtration analysis of the molecular weight distribution of the radiolabeled glycosaminoglycans indicated that I-cells and NH4Cl-treated normal fibroblasts (a) internalize cell surface proteoglycans, (b) remove glycosaminoglycan chains from proteoglycan core proteins, and (c) degrade heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains via an endoglycosidic activity. These processes occur with rates comparable to those in normal fibroblasts. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the glycosaminoglycan chains of cell-surface proteoglycans are separated from the protein cores in a nonlysosomal compartment prior to the transport of these chains to lysosomes for degradation. These observations also raise the possibility that this early step in separation of glycosaminoglycan chains from protein cores may serve to regulate the levels of glycosaminoglycan-free core protein observed in various cells.  相似文献   

19.
Proteoglycans are a family of extracellular macromolecules comprised of glycosaminoglycan chains of a repeated disaccharide linked to a central core protein. Proteoglycans have critical roles in chondrogenesis and skeletal development. The glycosaminoglycan chains found in cartilage proteoglycans are primarily composed of chondroitin sulfate. The integrity of chondroitin sulfate chains is important to cartilage proteoglycan function; however, chondroitin sulfate metabolism in mammals remains poorly understood. The solute carrier-35 D1 (SLC35D1) gene (SLC35D1) encodes an endoplasmic reticulum nucleotide-sugar transporter (NST) that might transport substrates needed for chondroitin sulfate biosynthesis. Here we created Slc35d1-deficient mice that develop a lethal form of skeletal dysplasia with severe shortening of limbs and facial structures. Epiphyseal cartilage in homozygous mutant mice showed a decreased proliferating zone with round chondrocytes, scarce matrices and reduced proteoglycan aggregates. These mice had short, sparse chondroitin sulfate chains caused by a defect in chondroitin sulfate biosynthesis. We also identified that loss-of-function mutations in human SLC35D1 cause Schneckenbecken dysplasia, a severe skeletal dysplasia. Our findings highlight the crucial role of NSTs in proteoglycan function and cartilage metabolism, thus revealing a new paradigm for skeletal disease and glycobiology.  相似文献   

20.
A differentiated population of cells with metachromatically staining granules and surface IgE receptors was obtained from mouse bone marrow cultured for 2 weeks in the presence of conditioned medium derived from concanavalin A-stimulated splenocytes. The cells were found to incorporate large amounts of [35S]sulfate into an intracellular 35S-labeled proteoglycan of Mr approximately 200,000 containing a maximum of seven glycosaminoglycan side chains (Mr = 25,000). After chondroitinase ABC treatment of density gradient-purified [3H] serine-labeled proteoglycan, the resulting core was Mr approximately 26,000 as assessed by gel filtration. Two-dimensional cellulose acetate electrophoresis of beta-eliminated 35S-labeled glycosaminoglycan revealed a single type of glycosaminoglycan that migrated at the position of oversulfated chondroitin sulfate E from squid cartilage. Chondroitinase ABC degradation of the 35S-labeled glycosaminoglycan yielded two cleavage products in approximately equal molar amounts which co-migrated in both descending paper chromatography and high voltage paper electrophoresis with a monosulfated disaccharide, 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-3-O-(beta-D-gluco-4-enepyranosyluronic acid)-4-O-sulfo-D-galactose, and a disulfated disaccharide, 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-3-O-(beta-D-gluco-4-enepyranosyluronic acid)-4-6-di-O-sulfo-D-galactose. The release of some free [35S]sulfate from the oversulfated disaccharide with either chondro-4-sulfatase or chondro-6-sulfatase and the complete desulfation by their combined action established that the oversulfated disaccharide contained N-acetylgalactosamine-4,6-disulfate. The 35S]labeled proteoglycan of these unique IgE receptor-bearing and histamine-containing cells, therefore, is composed of chondroitin sulfate E rather than heparin glycosaminoglycan, and thus is the first identification of such an intracellular localized proteoglycan in a mammalian cell.  相似文献   

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