Abstract

High-buoyant-density proteoglycan aggregates could not be prepared from extracts of adult human cartilage by associative CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation with a starting density of 1.68 g/ml, even though proteoglycan subunits, hyaluronic acid and link proteins were all present. In contrast, aggregates could be prepared when extracts of neonatal human cartilage or bovine nasal cartilage were subjected to the same procedure. This phenomenon did not appear to be due to a defect within the hyaluronic acid-binding region of the adult proteoglycan subunit, but rather to an interference in the stability of the interaction between the proteoglycan subunit and hyaluronic acid towards centrifugation. The factor responsible for this instability was shown to reside within the low-density cartilage protein preparation obtained by direct dissociative CsCl-density-gradient centrifugation of the adult cartilage extract.

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