Abstract

Calcium-acidic phospholipid-phosphate complexes, known to induce in vitro hydroxyapatite formation from metastable calcium phosphate sotutions, have been isolated from the morphologically defined zones of the bovine epiphyseal growth plate. The changes in zonal distribution of these complexes in epiphyseal cartilage correlate directly with other biochemical changes which occur prior to cartilage calcification. The concentration of calcium-acidic phospholipid-phosphate complexes increases going from the morphologically defined reserve zone to the proliferative zone, peaking in the hypertrophic zone, where mineralization is initiated, and decreasing in primary spongiosa and diaphyseal bone. Expressed as milligrams of calcium-phospholipid-phosphate complex per milligram hydroxyproline the concentration ranged from 19 (articular cartilage) to 535 (hypertrophic cell zone) decreasing to 43 (diaphyseal bone) with parallel changes being seen when the concentration was expressed per gram of demineralized dry tissue, per total lipid, per DNA, or, per 5′-AMPase activity.

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