Thyberg J
Histochem J. 1977 May;9(3):259-66. doi: 10.1007/BF01004761.
The proteoglycans of cartilage are complex molecules in which chondroitin sulphate and keratan sulphate chains are covalently linked to a protein core, forming a polydisperse population of proteoglycan monomers. By interaction with hyaluronic acid and link proteins, the monomers form large macromolecular complexes. In vivo the proteoglycans mainly occur in such aggregates. In the electron microsope, the cartilaginous matrix can be seen to be made up of thin collagen fibrils and polygonal granules about 10-50 nm in diameter Addition of the polyvalent cationic dye Ruthenium Red to glutaraldehyde and osmium tetroxide fixatives yields a dense selective staining of the matrix granules. Following a short digestion of cartilage slices with either of the chondroitin sulphate-degrading enzymes hyaluronidase and chondroitinase or with the proteolytic enzyme papain, the matrix granules were few in number or completely absent and the proteoglycan content, measured as hexosamine, decreased by up to 90%. Similarly, extraction of the cartilage with 4 M guanidine-HCl removed all matrix granules and most of the proteoglycans. From these findings, it can be concluded that the matrix granules represent proteoglycans, most probably in aggregate form, and that Ruthenium Red staining may be used to study the distribution of these macromolecules in thin sections. As a complement to chemical studies on proteoglycan structure, it is also possible to observe and measure individual molecules in the electron microscope after spreading them into a monomolecular layer with cytochrome c. This technique has been applied in investigations on proteoglycans isolated from bovine nasal cartilage and other hyaline cartilages. The molecules in the monomer fractions appeared as an extended central core filament to which about 25--30 side-chain filaments were attached at various intervals. The core filament, averaging about 300 nm in length, was interpreted as representing the polysaccharide binding part of the protein core and the side-chain filaments, averaging about 45 nm in length, as representing the clusters of chondroitin sulphate chains. Statistical treatment of the collected data indicated that no distinct subpopulations existed within the monomer fractions. The electron microscopic results correlated well with chemical data for the corresponding fractions and together with recent observations on various aggregate fractions strongly support present concepts of proteoglycan structure.
软骨蛋白聚糖是复杂的分子,其中硫酸软骨素和硫酸角质素链共价连接到蛋白质核心上,形成多分散的蛋白聚糖单体群体。通过与透明质酸和连接蛋白相互作用,单体形成大型大分子复合物。在体内,蛋白聚糖主要以这种聚集体形式存在。在电子显微镜下,可以看到软骨基质由细的胶原纤维和直径约10 - 50纳米的多边形颗粒组成。向戊二醛和四氧化锇固定剂中添加多价阳离子染料钌红会使基质颗粒产生密集的选择性染色。用硫酸软骨素降解酶透明质酸酶和软骨素酶或蛋白水解酶木瓜蛋白酶对软骨切片进行短暂消化后,基质颗粒数量很少或完全不存在,以己糖胺衡量的蛋白聚糖含量降低多达90%。同样,用4M盐酸胍提取软骨会去除所有基质颗粒和大部分蛋白聚糖。从这些发现可以得出结论,基质颗粒代表蛋白聚糖,很可能是以聚集体形式存在,并且钌红染色可用于研究这些大分子在薄切片中的分布。作为对蛋白聚糖结构化学研究的补充,在用细胞色素c将它们铺展成单分子层后,也可以在电子显微镜下观察和测量单个分子。该技术已应用于对从牛鼻软骨和其他透明软骨中分离出的蛋白聚糖的研究。单体部分中的分子呈现为一条延伸的中央核心细丝,约25 - 30条侧链细丝以不同间隔附着在其上。核心细丝平均长度约300纳米,被解释为代表蛋白质核心的多糖结合部分,侧链细丝平均长度约45纳米,被解释为代表硫酸软骨素链簇。对收集数据的统计处理表明,单体部分内不存在明显的亚群体。电子显微镜结果与相应部分的化学数据相关性良好,并且与最近对各种聚集体部分的观察结果一起有力地支持了目前关于蛋白聚糖结构的概念。