Lipid composition of isolated epiphyseal cartilage cells, membranes and matrix vesicles. |
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Authors: | R E Wuthier |
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Abstract: | 1. Intact cells, cell fragments (membranes) and matrix vesicles were isolated from the proliferating and calcifying layers of epiphyseal cartilage by sequential hyaluronidase and collagenase digestion and differential centrifugation. Lipids were extracted and analyzed for various lipid classes and their fatty acid composition by column, thin-layer, paper and gas-liquid chromatography. 2. On a protein basis the isolated matrix vesicles had more total lipid than either the membrane or cell fractions, the vesicles and membranes being richer in non-polar lipids and containing smaller quantities of phospholipids than whole cells. Expressed as a percentage of the total lipid, the cells were richer in triacylglycerols and lower in free fatty acids than in the membrane or vesicle fractions. The proportion of free cholesterol and the cholesterol/phospholipid ratio were nearly twice as high in the matrix vesicles as in the other tissue fractions. Choline and ethanolamine phosphoglycerides progressively declined in the membrane and matrix vesicle fractions, whereas serine phosphoglycerides and sphinogomyelin increased. Non-phosphorus-containing polar lipids were present in all fractions, the vesicles being richer in polyhexosyl ceramides, cerebrosides, glycosyldiacylglycerols and certain uncharacterized acidic polar lipids. 3. Fatty acid patterns of the matrix vesicles were distinctive from those of isolated cells, being generally richer in 18 : 0 and 18 : 2, and lower in 16 : 1 and 18 : 1 fatty acids. Monoacyl forms were similarly increased in 16 : 0 and/or 18 : 0, and reduced in 16 : 1, 18 : 1 or 20 : 2 fatty acids, depending on the lipid class. The fatty acid composition of diphosphatidylglycerol from cells and matrix vesicles was markedly different, providing evidence that the cardiolipin in the vesicles was not from mitochondrial components. 4. Based on the fact that the matrix vesicles were significantly enriched in free cholesterol, sphingomyelin, glycolipids and serine-phosphoglycerides, it is concluded that they are derived from the plasma membrane of the cell, supporting earlier conclusions based upon morphological and enzymological evidence. |
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