Quantitative analysis of type X-collagen biosynthesis by embryonic-chick sternal cartilage

Abstract
We have performed a quantitative analysis of the various collagens biosynthesized by organ cultures of whole embryonic-chick sternum and its separate anatomical regions corresponding to the zones of permanent hyaline and presumptive-calcification cartilages. Our studies demonstrated that embryonic-chick sternum devotes a large portion of its biosynthetic commitment towards production of Type X collagen, which represented approx. 18% of the total newly synthesized collagen. Comparison of the collagens biosynthesized by the permanent hyaline cartilage and by the cartilage from the presumptive-calcification zone demonstrated that Type X-collagen production was strictly confined to the presumptive-calcification region. Sequential extraction of the newly synthesized Type X collagen demonstrated the existence of two separate populations. One population (approx. 20%) was composed of easily extractable molecules that were solubilized with 1.0 m-NaCl/50 mM-Tris/HCI buffer, pH 7.4. The second population was composed of molecules that were not extractable even after repeated pepsin digestion, but became completely solubilized after treatment with 20 mM-dithiothreitol/0.15 M-NaCl buffer at neutral pH. These results suggest that most of the Type X collagen normally exists in the tissue as part of a pepsin-resistant molecular aggregate that may be stabilized by disulphide bonds. Quantitative analysis of the proportion of Type X collagen relative to the other collagens synthesized in the cultures indicated that this collagen was a major biosynthetic product of the presumptive-calcification cartilage, since it represented about 35% of the total collagen synthesized by this tissue. In contrast, the permanent hyaline cartilage did not display any detectable synthesis of Type X collagen. When compared on a per-cell basis, the chondrocytes from the presumptive-calcification zone synthesized approx. 33% more Type X collagen than the amount of Type II collagen synthesized by the chondrocytes from the permanent-hyaline-cartilage zone. Subsequently, it was demonstrated that Type X collagen is a structural component of chick sternum matrix, since quantitative amounts could be extracted from the region of presumptive calcification of 17-day-old chick-embryo sterna and from the calcified portion of adult-chick sterna. The strict topographic distribution in the expression of Type X collagen biosynthesis to the zone of presumptive calcification suggests that this collagen may play an important role in initiation or progression of tissue calcification.