Abstract

Articular cartilage extracts were prepared to characterize protein fractions with in vivo chondrogenic activity (Chang, S., Hoang, B., Thomas, J. T., Vukicevic, S., Luyten, F. P., Ryba, N. J. P., Kozak, C. A., Reddi, A. H., and Moos, M. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 28227-28234). Trypsin digestion of highly purified chondrogenic protein fractions allowed the identification of several unique peptides by amino acid sequencing. We discovered a novel cDNA encoding a deduced 36-kDa protein by using degenerate oligonucleotide primers derived from a 30-residue peptide in reverse transcription polymerase chain reactions. Its N-terminal domain showed approximately 50% amino acid identity to the corresponding region of the Drosophila gene frizzled, which has been implicated in the specification of hair polarity during development. Hydropathy and structural analyses of the open reading frame revealed the presence of a signal peptide and a hydrophobic domain followed by multiple potential serine/threonine phosphorylation sites and a serine-rich C terminus. Cell fractionation studies of primary bovine articular chondrocytes and transfected COS cells suggested that the protein is membrane-associated. In situ hybridization and immunostaining of human embryonic sections demonstrated predominant expression surrounding the chondrifying bone primordia and subsequently in the chondrocytes of the epiphyses in a graded distribution that decreased toward the primary ossification center. Transcripts were present in the craniofacial structures but not in the vertebral bodies. Because it is expressed primarily in the cartilaginous cores of developing long bones during embryonic and fetal development (6-13 weeks) and is homologous to the polarity-determining gene frizzled, we believe that this gene, which we named frzb, is involved in morphogenesis of the mammalian skeleton.

Highlights

  • Articular cartilage extracts were prepared to characterize protein fractions with in vivo chondrogenic activity

  • Trypsin digestion of highly purified chondrogenic protein fractions allowed the identification of several unique peptides by amino acid sequencing

  • Starting from a 30-amino acid peptide, we identified a cDNA encoding a novel Frizzled-like protein

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Summary

THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY

Vol 271, No 42, Issue of October 18, pp. 26131–26137, 1996 Printed in U.S.A. Primary Structure and Tissue Distribution of FRZB, a Novel Protein Related to Drosophila Frizzled, Suggest a Role in Skeletal Morphogenesis*. Frizzled encodes an integral membrane protein with seven potential transmembrane domains This locus is required for cellular response to a tissue polarity signal as well as intercellular transmission of that signal along the proximaldistal wing axis [5, 6]. In an effort to identify signaling molecules involved in skeletal patterning and skeletal tissue formation, we used cartilage to isolate highly purified protein fractions with in vivo chondrogenic activity [1]. Unlike the Frizzled family of proteins, this gene does not contain seven transmembrane domains This homology, along with its striking expression pattern in skeletal structures, suggests that this novel gene, which we named frzb, is intimately involved in skeletal patterning

MATERIALS AND METHODS
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