Abstract

Monoclonal antibodies have been developed that recognize epitopes in native chondroitin sulfate chains. One of these antibodies, CS-56, reportedly recognizes chondroitin 4- and 6sulfates. However, this antibody, and four other anti-chondroitin sulfate antibodies, 40, 4D3, 60 and 7D4, do not recognize epitopes in chondroitin sulfate chains from Swarm rat chondrosarcoma proteoglycan, an indication that native chondroitin sulfate epitopes are more structurally complex than the standard 0-, 4-, and 6-sulfated disaccharide repeats that constitute the backbone of chondroitin sulfate chains. A series of limited chondroitinase digestions was performed on the large aggregating proteoglycan monomer extracted from embryonic chick chondrocyte cultures to identify the digestion parameters required to release the different native chondroitin sulfate epitopes. Some epitopes were more accessible to enzymatic digestion than other epitopes. The approximate location of epitopes was determined by measuring the size of undigested oligosaccharides retained on the core protein following a limited digestion, and correlating this with the level of immunoreactivity for the different antibodies. These analyses identified the locations of three different antigenic domains. Domain 1 resides at the linkage region and contains epitopes for two of the five antibodies, and a portion of the epitopes for a third antibody. Domain 2 lies in the interior of the chain and contains epitopes for three of the five antibodies. Domain 3 resides at the non-reducing terminus and does not contain epitopes for any of the anti-chondroitin sulfate antibodies used in this study. These results indicate that specific native chondroitin sulfate epitopes are non-randomly distributed within the linear framework of chondroitin sulfate chains.

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