Synthesis of type I and type II collagen by embryonic chick cartilage

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Abstract

Embryonic chick articular and keel cartilage was found to synthesize two types of collagen. The amount of Type I collagen synthesis decreased from 60% to nearly 10% during the embryonic period studied, thus suggesting not only coexistence of both collagen types in the same tissue, but also a developmental transformation from predominantly Type I synthesis to Type II synthesis with cartilage development and maturation. Radioautographs suggested that all chondrocytes were equally active in collagen synthesis and failed to show any significant non-cartilagenous tissue contamination. Therefore variation in collagen type synthesis must be a product of some unknown genetic regulatory mechanism within the cartilage tissue.

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