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Histochemical evidence of a functional heterogeneity of the chondrocytes of adult canine articular cartilage

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Twenty humeral heads were collected from 10 adult English Pointer dogs, fixed in 15% formalin containing cetylpyridinium chloride, decalcified, processed for paraffin sections, and cut serially. The articular cartilage was studied by staining principally with Alcian Blue in the presence of 0.4 or 0.9m MgCl2 with and without a van Gieson counterstain. The results of the differential staining procedures demonstrated the existence of two groups of chondrocytes with distinctly different staining affinities. One group reacted intensely for the presence of protein-polysaccharides within its cytoplasm while the other group completely lacked this property. An approximate proportionality of 3∶1 of the protein polysaccharide-positive and-negative chondrocytes was observed in the tangential layer and upper intermediate zone. In the lower intermediate zone, radiate zone, and zone of calcified cartilage, the chondrocyte types were present in equal proportions. Staining with Alcian Blue in the presence of 0.9m MgCl2 with and without a van Gieson counterstain indicated a further subdivision of the protein-polysaccharide positive group of chondrocytes. This blocking technique has been reported to distinguish between chondroitin sulphate and high mol. wt. keratosulphate. Thus, based upon a greatly decreased number of the blue-stained chondrocytes after staining with Alcian Blue in the presence of 0.9m MgCl2 the hypothesis is put forward that some chondrocytes produce primarily chondroitin suphate and others produce both chondroitin sulphate and keratosulphate.

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Kincaid, S.A., Van Sickle, D.C. & Wilsman, N.J. Histochemical evidence of a functional heterogeneity of the chondrocytes of adult canine articular cartilage. Histochem J 4, 237–243 (1972). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01890995

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