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. 1998 Jun;54(6):606–613. doi: 10.1007/s000180050188

Ultrastructural localization of microfibrillar fibulin-1 and fibulin-2 during heart development indicates a switch in molecular associations

N Miosge 1, T Sasaki 2, M-L Chu 3, R Herken 1, R Timpl 2
PMCID: PMC11147377  PMID: 9676579

Abstract.

The microfibrillar proteins fibulin-1 and fibulin-2 were previously identified as prominent components of the endocardial cushion tissue (ECT) during heart development and shown to persist in adult valves and septa. Immunogold staining has now been used to compare their localization in embryonic (days 9–11) and adult mouse heart with that of fibronectin and the chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan versican. All four proteins were deposited in the ECT, which consists of a hyaluronan-rich, mainly unstructured matrix, but were barely detectable in myocardial basement membranes or within endocardial cells. Digestion with hyaluronate lyase selectively released the fibulins and versican but not fibronectin from the ECT. Yet neither of the two fibulins bound to hyluronan in solid-phase assays, in contrast to versican. In the adult heart valve, all four proteins could be detected close to cross-striated collagen fibrils or microfibrils, but only versican was lost upon exposure to hyaluronate lyase. The data indicate that fibulins are associated with the hyaluronan-matrix of ECT through a bridge of versican, but that this association changes upon valve development to another supramolecular, presumably microfibrillar organization based on fibronectin and/or fibrillins.

Keywords: Key words. Heart development; extracellular matrix; heart valves; hyaluronan; immunogold staining; microfibrils.

Footnotes

Received 3 April 1998; accepted 8 April 1998


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