Publication | Open Access
Influence of collagen lattice on the metabolism of small proteoglycan II by cultured fibroblasts
30
Citations
36
References
1990
Year
Tissue EngineeringPolysaccharide ChainGlycobiologyCell CultureCollagen LatticeCellular PhysiologyMatrix BiologyCollagen GelsFibrosisBiochemistrySmall Proteoglycan IiCell BiologyNatural SciencesCultured FibroblastsCell-matrix InteractionTissue CultureCellular BiochemistryMedicineHuman TissueExtracellular Matrix
Small dermatan sulphate proteoglycan II from cultured human skin fibroblasts interacts with type I collagen in vitro and in vivo. When fibroblasts are maintained in a type I collagen lattice the proteoglycan remains exclusively within the lattice, and its association with fibrils can be demonstrated immunocytochemically. On the basis of [35S]sulphate incorporation, small proteoglycan II comprises about 80% of total proteoglycans secreted by cells in monolayer culture. In a collagen lattice, fibroblasts down-regulate its synthesis to the level of large chondroitin sulphate/dermatan sulphate and of heparan sulphate proteoglycans, the synthesis of which remains unaffected. Compared with the product from monolayer cultures, small proteoglycan II from collagen gels contained a longer polysaccharide chain which is characterized by a larger proportion of disulphated and a smaller proportion of monosulphated glucuronic acid-containing disaccharides. The half-life varied between 60 and 110 h. It is suggested that the compositional differences between the proteoglycan from monolayer cultures and from cells in a collagen lattice are related to the slower intracellular trafficking of the proteoglycan under the latter culture conditions.
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