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Biochemical analysis of normal articular cartilage in horses.
1990
Vachon A.M. | Keeley F.W. | McIlwraith C.W. | Chapman P.
Articular cartilage specimens from the distal articular surface of 32 radiocarpal bones from 24 2- to 5-year-old horses were analyzed. The total collagen content was determined on the basis of the 4-hydroxyproline content, using a colorimetric method. A method for estimating the proportions of types-I and -II collagen by measuringspectrophotometric densities of specific cyanogen bromide peptide bands from mixtures of types-I and -II collagen on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels was used. The cyanogen bromide peptides representative of each collagen types-I and -II were identified. The peptide ratios were then computed for each of several standards of type-I and -II mixtures. A standard curve was derived from the correlation between these ratios and the corresponding proportions of type-II collagen in standard mixtures. Galactosamine and glucosamine content (hexosamines) were measured by ion chromatography. Thegalactosamine-to-glucosamine ratio, chondroitin sulfate and keratan sulfate values, and total glycosaminoglycan content were derived from the measured hexosamine content. The total collagen content averaged 556 mg/g (55.6 mg/100 mg) of tissue (dry weight, [dw]). Type-II collagen was the major collagen type in normal articular cartilage specimens. The ratio of the area under the alpha 1 (II)CB10 peak to the area under the alpha 1 (I)CB 7,8 + alpha 1 (II)CB11 peak was a second-order polynomial function of the proportion of type-II collagen in the specimens. The mean galactosamine and glucosamine content were 20.6 mg/g and 7.9 mg/g (dw), respectively. The meangalactosamine-to-glucosamine ratio was 3.74 +/- 0.62. Chondroitin sulfate values, keratan sulfate values, and total glycosaminoglycan content were 53.3 +/- 4.9 mg/g, 19.9 +/- 3.6 mg/g, and 73.2 +/- 7.9 mg/g (dw), respectively. There was no significant correlation between the age of the horses and any of the chemical values (P>0.1). The biochemical composition of articular cartilage in the horse is similar to that of other species.
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