Publication | Open Access
LOCALIZATION OF HYALURONIC ACID IN SYNOVIAL CELLS BY RADIOAUTOGRAPHY
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Citations
18
References
1968
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringGlycobiologyCell CulturePolyvinyl ChloridePolysaccharideBiomedical EngineeringLabeled PolysaccharideCulture MediumCellular PhysiologyTissue ImagingBiochemistryHistopathologyCell BiologyBiomedical ImagingCellular BiochemistryMedicineHuman TissueExtracellular Matrix
Cultured human synovial cells secrete hyaluronic acid (HA) into the culture medium. Glucosamine-6-(3)H was shown to be a direct and relatively specific precursor of HA-(3)H by the following observations: the susceptibility of nondialyzable radioactivity in the medium to hyaluronidase, its migration with hexuronic acid on zone electrophoresis in polyvinyl chloride, its exclusion from Sephadex G-200, and the localization of radioactivity to glucosamine after hydrolysis of the labeled polysaccharide. The presence of intracellular HA-(3)H was established by sequential extraction of labeled cells and by radioautography of synovial cell cultures digested with hyaluronidase in situ. When cells were exposed to medium lacking glucose, glucosamine-(3)H-uptake was enhanced; and this made possible electron microscopic radioautographic studies. These studies demonstrate the early and continued presence of HA-(3)H within the Golgi apparatus.
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