Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Proteoglycans in normal and severely osteoarthritic human cartilage

1980; Portland Press; Volume: 187; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1042/bj1870781

ISSN

1470-8728

Autores

Nagaswami Vasan,

Tópico(s)

Cell Adhesion Molecules Research

Resumo

Proteoglycans from osteoarthritic cartilage were compared with those from normal articular cartilage. Normal proteoglycan aggregates are larger in size and more homogeneous than those in osteoarthritis. Proteoglycan monomers from both sources gave two peaks on controlled pore glass-bead chromatography. Although the retarded material from normal cartilage showed an affinity for hyaluronate, the same material from osteoarthritic cartilage did not. The hyaluronate-binding capacity of the material which is partly in the void volume and partly retarded was similar in both types of cartilage. These results suggest that in osteoarthritic cartilage the proteoglycan aggregates are smaller and more heterogeneous and that the chondroitin sulphate side chains are shorter. They also indicate that there are two populations of proteoglycan, one with its hyaluronate-binding-protein region of core protein intact and the other either possessing an inactive binding region or totally lacking it.

Referência(s)