Abstract

Skin explant cultures from hairless mice of increasing age were incubated with radioactive precursors in order to determine the age-dependent variations of the biosyntheses of fibronectin and fibrous collagens (types I and III). Total collagen synthesis expressed as a percentage of total protein synthesis did not vary with age but, if expressed as μg hydroxyproline per mg wet weight of skin, decreased by about 30% between 2 and 22 months of age. Hydroxylation of collagen, expressed as the ratio,of 3H-hypro over 3H (pro + hypro) incorporated in freshly synthesized collagen, decreased with age by about 40% between 2 and 22 months of age. The proportion of type III collagen expressed as % of type I + type III collagens increased progressively with age by about 25% at 12 months to 60% at 22 months of age. Fibronectin biosynthesis, determined by immunoprecipitation of 35S-methionine labeled peptides in SDS-extracts of skin increased progressively with age from about 2% of total incorporated radioactivity in fibronectin at 2 months to 4% at 22 months. Plasma fibronectin, of hepatic origin, was shown already to increase with age in humans. It appears thus that the expression of genes coding for extracellular matrix macromolecules is under age-dependent regulation. This regulation appears to be different for the investigated macromolecules.

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