The alginate bead culture system has been utilised by several groups to examine the in vitro proteoglycan
(PG) metabolism of chondrocytes and intervertebral disc cells, but the nature of the PGs produced has not
been examined in detail. This is largely due to the difficulty of separating the anionically charged sodium
alginate support matrix from PGs which are similarly charged. In the present study ovine annulus fibrosus,
transitional zone and nucleus pulposus cells were dissociated enzymatically from their respective matrices by
sequential digestion with pronase/clostridial collagenase and DNAase and then cultured in alginate beads
for 10 d. The beads were solubilised and subjected to DEAE Sepharose CL6B anion exchange
chromatography to separate the sodium alginate bead support matrix material quantitatively from the disc
cell PGs. The alginate free bead PGs were then subjected to composite agarose polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis to resolve PG populations and the PGs were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes by
semidry electroblotting. The PGs were identified by probing the blots with a panel of antibodies to defined
PG core protein and glycosaminoglycan side chain epitopes. Alginate beads of disc cells were also embedded
in paraffin wax and 4μm sections cut to immunolocalise decorin, biglycan, versican, and the 7-D-4 PG
epitope within the beads. Decorin and biglycan had similar distributions in the beads, being localised on the
cell surface whereas versican and the 7-D-4 PG epitope were immunolocalised interterritoriarly. This study is
the first to demonstrate that ovine disc cells synthesise versican in alginate bead culture. Furthermore the
immunoblotting studies also showed that a proportion of the 7-D-4 PG epitope was colocalised with
versican.