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Matrix disruptions, growth, and degradation of cartilage with impaired sulfation
Authors:Mertz Edward L  Facchini Marcella  Pham Anna T  Gualeni Benedetta  De Leonardis Fabio  Rossi Antonio  Forlino Antonella
Institution:Section on Physical Biochemistry, Eunice Kennedy Shriver NICHD, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA. mertze@mail.nih.gov
Abstract:Diastrophic dysplasia (DTD) is an incurable recessive chondrodysplasia caused by mutations in the SLC26A2 transporter responsible for sulfate uptake by chondrocytes. The mutations cause undersulfation of glycosaminoglycans in cartilage. Studies of dtd mice with a knock-in Slc26a2 mutation showed an unusual progression of the disorder: net undersulfation is mild and normalizing with age, but the articular cartilage degrades with age and bones develop abnormally. To understand underlying mechanisms, we studied newborn dtd mice. We developed, verified and used high-definition infrared hyperspectral imaging of cartilage sections at physiological conditions, to quantify collagen and its orientation, noncollagenous proteins, and chondroitin chains, and their sulfation with 6-μm spatial resolution and without labeling. We found that chondroitin sulfation across the proximal femur cartilage varied dramatically in dtd, but not in the wild type. Corresponding undersulfation of dtd was mild in most regions, but strong in narrow articular and growth plate regions crucial for bone development. This undersulfation correlated with the chondroitin synthesis rate measured via radioactive sulfate incorporation, explaining the sulfation normalization with age. Collagen orientation was reduced, and the reduction correlated with chondroitin undersulfation. Such disorientation involved the layer of collagen covering the articular surface and protecting cartilage from degradation. Malformation of this layer may contribute to the degradation progression with age and to collagen and proteoglycan depletion from the articular region, which we observed in mice already at birth. The results provide clues to in vivo sulfation, DTD treatment, and cartilage growth.
Keywords:Chondroitin  Chondroitin Sulfate  Collagen  Connective Tissue  Extracellular Matrix  Glycosaminoglycan  Infrared Spectroscopy  Proteoglycan Synthesis  Cartilage  Development
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