Intracellular features of type II procollagen and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan synthesis in chondrocytes

Abstract
The intracellular compartments of chondrocytes involved in the synthesis and processing of type II procollagen and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (CSPG) monomer were investigated using simultaneous double immunofluorescence and lectin localization reactions. Type II procollagen was distributed in vesicles throughout the cytoplasm, whereas intracellular precursors of CSPG monomer were accumulated in the perinuclear cytoplasm. In this study, cytoplasmic vesicles that stained intensely with antibodies directed against CSPG monomer but did not react with type II collagen antibodies, also were observed. A monoclonal antibody, 5‐D‐4, that recognizes keratan sulfate determinants was used to identify the Golgi complex (the site of keratan sulfate chain elongation). Staining with 5‐D‐4 was restricted to the perinuclear cytoplasm. The vesicles outside the perinuclear cytoplasm that stained intensely with antibodies to CSPG monomer did not react with 5‐D‐4. Fluorescent lectins were used to characterize further subcellular compartments. Concanavalin A, which reacts with mannose‐rich oligosaccharides, did not stain the perinuclear region, but it did stain vesicles throughout the rest of the cytoplasm. Because mannos oligosaccharides are added cotranslationally, the stained vesicles throughout the cytoplasm presumably correspond to the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Wheat germ agglutinin, which recognizes N‐acetyl‐D‐glucosamine and sialic acid (carbohydrates added in the Golgi), stained exclusively the perinuclear cytoplasm. By several criteria (staining with the monoclonal antibody 5‐D‐4 and with wheat germ agglutinin), the perinuclear cytoplasm seems to correspond to the Golgi complex. The cytoplasmic vesicles that react with anti‐CSPG monomer and not with anti‐type II collagen contain precursors of CSPG monomer not yet modified by Golgi‐mediated oligosaccharide additions (because they are not stained with wheat germ agglutinin or with the anti‐keratan sulfate antibody); these vesicles may have a unique function in the processing of CSPG.