Seeking a reliable chemical index of the wear of articular cartilage
during in vitro experiments, the contents of hydroxyproline, hexosamine,
and the amino acid composition of adult bovine articular cartilage were
determined as functions of depth from the surface. The hydroxyproline
content, expressed as per cent of dry weight of tissue, was constant
throughout the thickness of the tissue except in a surface region
approximately twenty-five micrometers thick; the hexosamine content in this
region was less than in the interior of the tissue; the collagen content
was higher and the amino acid composition was less like that of pure
collagen here than in the interior, indicating that the content of
noncollagenous protein in the superficial layer of cartilage was greater
than that in the interior. It was also evident that adult bovine articular
cartilage contains significant amounts of collagen with a low hydroxylysine
content, presumably Type I as well as Type II. Since the content of
hydroxyproline is constant throughout the cartilage and the collagen and
proteoglycan constituents of the intact tissue are relatively insoluble,
the hydroxyproline content of the lubricant and the wear debris can be used
to measure the extent of wear of articular cartilage during in vitro
experiments. However, approximately 10 per cent of the hydroxyproline and
50 to 60 per cent of the glycosaminoglycans of the wear debris are
dissolved in the lubricating fluid. Therefore, both the lubricant (solvent)
and the solid wear debris must be analyzed to determine the amount of
cartilage wear.