The composition of cartilage proteoglycans. An investigation using high-and low-ionic-strength extraction procedures
- 1 March 1973
- journal article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 131 (3) , 541-553
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1310541
Abstract
1. A proteoglycan fraction (the proteoglycan subunit fraction) was prepared from extracts, with 0.15m-KCl (low-ionic-strength) and 0.5m-LaCl3, 2.0m-CaCl2 and 4.0m-guanidinium chloride (high-ionic-strength), of bovine nasal cartilage by equilibrium-density-gradient centrifugation, essentially as described by Hascall & Sajdera (1969). 2. The use of different centrifugation times showed that near-equilibrium conditions were reached by 48h for the fractions prepared from the high-ionic-strength extracts. The fraction isolated from the low-ionic-strength extract required a longer centrifugation time to reach equilibrium conditions. 3. The composition of the proteoglycan fractions from the various extracts was compared by analyses of their carbohydrate and amino acid contents. Difference indices were calculated from the amino acid analysis to compare the degree of compositional relationship between the protein components of the proteoglycans. 4. Small compositional differences were found between the proteoglycans isolated from the various high-ionic-strength extracts. The protein content of the fractions from the CaCl2 extract and the guanidinium chloride extract showed the greatest difference in this respect, although their amino acid analysis was similar. 5. The proteoglycan fraction isolated from the low-ionic-strength extract shows marked differences in composition from the fractions isolated from the high-ionic-strength extracts. Its protein and glucosamine contents were lower whereas its hexuronic acid and galactosamine contents were higher than those of the latter. It also exhibits major differences in its amino acid composition. The glucosamine:galactosamine ratio of the fraction from the low-ionic-strength extract indicates that it may be an almost exclusively chondroitin sulphate–proteoglycan. Its analysis correlates closely with that of a low-molecular-weight proteoglycan isolated from pig laryngeal cartilage by Tsiganos & Muir (1969). 6. The proteoglycan fractions from both the low- and high-ionic-strength extracts migrate as a single band in zone electrophoresis carried out in a sucrose-density gradient at both pH3.0 and pH7.0, although each showed evidence of band widening during the electrophoresis. All the proteoglycan fractions migrated with the same electrophoretic mobility at pH3.0, irrespective of the differences in composition between them. 7. The differences between the proteoglycans from the low- and high-ionic-strength extracts are discussed and the view is advanced that they may be due to association between predominantly chondroitin sulphate–proteoglycans and a keratan sulphate-enriched proteoglycan species.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The glycosaminoglycans of human tracheobronchial cartilageBiochemical Journal, 1970
- Physical Properties and Polydispersity of Proteoglycan from Bovine Nasal CartilageJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1970
- Studies on protein–polysaccharides from pig laryngeal cartilage. Extraction and purificationBiochemical Journal, 1969
- Proteinpolysaccharide complex from bovine nasal cartilage. The function of glycoprotein in the formation of aggregates.1969
- Proteinpolysaccharide complex from bovine nasal cartilage. A comparison of low and high shear extraction procedures.1969
- Assessment of Compositional Relatedness between ProteinsNature, 1968
- Mobility measurements by photometric analysis of zone electrophoresis in a sucrose gradient columnAnalytical Biochemistry, 1968
- Structure of the Neutral Trisaccharide of the Chondroitin 4-Sulfate-Protein Linkage RegionJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1966
- Structure of connective tissues, a chemical point of view.1966
- The Use of Lanthanum to Study the Degradation of a Proteinpolysaccharide from CartilageJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1964