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Resumen de Integrins in ageing cartilage tissue in vitro

M. Shakibaei, H. Abou Fiebye, H. J. Merker

  • Matrix-cell interactions are of great irnportance for numerous cell functions whereby integrins play an essential role as transmicters of extracellular signals. In cultures of ageing cartilage tissue (organoid or high density cultures) cartilage cells occur on the surface of which thick fibrils of collagen type 1 are deposited. Since integrins, in their role as receptors, cause an interaction between matrix components and cell membrane, we tried to demonstrate immunomorphologically (light and electron microscopically) the corresponding integrin receptors for collagen type 1 (B, al and B1%) on the surface of these ageing cartilage cells. Cultures of normal, i.e. young cartilage tissue exhibit only Ola3- and Bla5~receptorsl;a belling against the integrins Blal and Bla2 1s not possible in this case. Our results show that after the occurrence of thick fibrils cartilage cells express new receptors (Blal and fila2)o n the cell membrane. Thus, in ageing or dedifferentiating cartilage tissue it is not only the synthesis programme of matrix components (e.g. instead of collagen type 11 >> collagen type 1) which changes but also the integrins (instead of a3/B1, a51Bl >> allB1, a2/B1) so that new collagen types can be bound. These findings may also serve for a better understanding and interpretation of cartilage changes in vivo during ageing and under pathological conditions.


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