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Formation of cartilage by non-chondrogenic cell types
Authors:M A Nathanson  S R Hilfer  R L Searls
Affiliation:Department of Biology, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122 USA
Abstract:Freshly excised embryonic rat skeletal muscle has been shown to form hyaline cartilage when organ cultured upon demineralized rat bone (bone matrix). Since skeletal muscle is composed of fibrous connective tissue (C.T.) as well as muscle cells, the cartilage could arise from either of these sources. The object of this study was to determine whether cartilage arose from fibrous connective tissue or muscle cells, or both, and whether the ability to form cartilage is limited to tissues derived from somatic mesoderm. Control experiments demonstrated that 19-day embryonic rat skeletal muscle formed cartilage when organ cultured on bone matrix after dissociation and cultivation in vitro, and that 11-day embryonic chick muscle also formed cartilage, although less reproducibly (3 out of 10 cases). Fibroblasts and skeletal muscle were cloned from similar suspensions of dissociated muscle in order to test these purified cell types. Dermis, vascular tissue, and tendons were mechanically removed prior to dissociation in order to eliminate fibroblasts from contaminant sources. Cloned fibroblasts, derived from rat skeletal muscle, formed cartilage in three out of three cases. It was not possible to clone sufficient rat skeletal muscle to place an aggregate onto bone matrix. An aggregate of several hundred chick skeletal muscle clones formed cartilage on bone matrix. The freshly excised C.T. capsules of embryonic chick thyroid and lung were tested for the ability to form cartilage as nonskeletal C.T. derivatives. The epithelial rudiments of thyroid and lung were also tested as endodermal derivatives. Chick cornea was similarly tested as an ectodermal derivative. Of these tissues, only the C.T. capsules formed cartilage. The results demonstrate that various C.T. cell types may alter their phenotype well after that stage at which their differentiation is thought to be stabilized, and that the ability to differentiate as cartilage may be common to all C.T. cells. The option of differentiating along a certain variety of pathways may depend more upon local conditions than on a predetermined pattern.
Keywords:Present address: Department of Anatomy   Harvard University Medical School   25 Shattuck Street   Boston   Mass. 02115. To whom correspondence should be addressed.
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