Human and sheep growth-plate cartilage type X collagen synthesis and the influence of tissue storage

1991 
Direct comparison of type X collagen synthesized by human, sheep and chick growth-plate cartilage has shown that the human type X collagen is similar to the chick in both its molecular mass, containing component alpha-chains of 59 kDa with helical regions of 45 kDa, and apparent absence of disulphide-stabilized aggregates, whereas the sheep type X collagen has slightly larger alpha-chains (63 kDa) accounted for by a longer helical region (49 kDa) that contains cystine residues essential for the formation of the high-molecular-mass aggregates found with this species. Type X collagen from all three species showed heterogeneity in primary collagen structure as revealed by Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteinase-generated peptide maps. Collagen synthesis by growth-plate cartilage in culture, particularly synthesis of type IX and X collagen, was shown to be very sensitive to prior storage and suggests caution in the interpretation of changes detected when examining collagen synthesis by growth plates in culture.
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