Correlated metabolism of proteoglycans and hyaluronic acid in bovine cartilage organ cultures.

  1. T I Morales and
  2. V C Hascall
  1. Bone Research Branch, National Institute of Dental Research, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.

    Abstract

    Proteoglycans exist in cartilage as complexes in which many proteoglycan molecules are bound to a central filament of hyaluronic acid. Many studies have investigated changes taking place in proteoglycan monomer structure during cartilage catabolism usually under the assumption that hyaluronic acid is a relatively inert metabolic component of the complex. In this paper we present organ culture data supporting a new hypothesis that the catabolism of proteoglycans and hyaluronic acid are coordinately regulated by chondrocytes. The data indicates that: 1) newly synthesized hyaluronate and proteoglycan maintain a nearly constant ratio, almost identical to that existing for the total chemical amounts of these two components in cartilage tissue; 2) these two components are catabolized with virtually identical kinetics; and 3) this catabolic relationship in vitro reflects the loss of hyaluronate and proteoglycans from native, undissociated aggregates as isolated from the tissue. We conclude that hyaluronate catabolism is an integral part of the overall mechanism of proteoglycan resorption in cartilage and that further understanding of this process may be key to the elucidation of the regulatory pathways for proteoglycan resorption in health and disease.

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