Abstract

Aortic proteoglycans, from the growth medium of cultured smooth muscle cells and from sequential associative and dissociative extracts of the tissue of origin, the pig aorta, were isolated and purified by precipitation with cetylpiridinium chloride. After isopycnic CsCl gradient centrifugation under associative conditions 94% of the cell-secreted proteoglycans were recuperated in the bottom one fifth ( ϱ av = 1.62 g/ml) fraction. In contrast 80% of the tissue proteoglycans of both extracts, fractionated into two fractions: the bottom one fifth ( ϱ av = 1.60 g/ml) fraction and three fifths ( ϱ av = 1.42 g/ml) fraction. Fractionated tissue proteoglycans were composed predominantly of chondroitin sulfate-dermatan sulfate (83–90%) with lower proportions of heparan sulfate (5–11%) and hyaluronic acid (3–6%) whilst cell-secreted proteoglycans showed a similar glycosaminoglycan composition but with a higher proportion of hyaluronic acid (11–13%). Sepharose 2B and C1-2B chromatography of tissue proteoglycans of high buoyant density showed the presence of only subunit proteoglycans whilst those of intermediate density contained a complex species, partially dissociable in 4 M guanidinium chloride, along with K av 0.50 subunit species. The latter was also observed for cell-secreted proteoglycans although obtained at high buoyant density. The cell-secreted subunit proteoglycans became separated into two distinct populations when chromatographed on Sepharose 4B and C1-4B, half of which eluted in the column V o and the rest at a K av of 0.34.. The majority of subunit macromolecules eluted at the V o fractions of Sepharose 6B and C1-6B columns. Unlike the major species of cartilage proteoglycans, only approx. 20% of purified arterial proteoglycans formed complexes. This proportion could be increased by only 4–7% by interaction, of a mixture of subunit cell-secreted and tissue-extracted proteoglycans, with hyaluronic acid. These results suggest that proteoglycans secreted by cultured aortic smooth muscle cells and present in the aortic tissue possess certain similar physicochemical properties and are present in the form of complex and several subunit species.

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