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In situ cross-linking of cartilage proteoglycans

โœ Scribed by Frank M. Phillips; Dr. Lawrence A. Pottenger; Rick V. Hay


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
999 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
0736-0266

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Although the in vitro interactions between purified cartilage matrix components have been studied extensively, little is known about these interactions in situ. In this study, cartilage was treated with a crossโ€linking reagent with a span of 1.2 nm between its reactive terminal groups in order to preserve the native relationships between closely associated matrix components throughout extraction, purification, and preparation for electron microscopy. After in situ crossโ€linking, electron microscopy and gel chromatography revealed that about oneโ€half of the guanidine hydrochloride extractable proteoglycans were polymeric, usually with two to five proteoglycan subunits in each polymer. Crossโ€linking consistently involved the thin segments of the proteoglycan subunits. Some of the proteoglycan polymers were capable of binding hyaluronic acid and were parts of aggregates under associative conditions. SDSโ€“polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that link proteins were present within the polymers, and studies in which purified proteoglycans were crossโ€linked in vitro confirmed that the link proteins increased the proportion of polymeric proteoglycans. These findings suggest that individual proteoglycans within cartilage have intimate associations with other proteoglycans that are mediated by link proteins.


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