“…Lipid accumulation in calcified cartilage areas is also shown by staining with sudan black after pyridine extraction (Bonucci et al 1978), and using the MC22-33F antibody, which displays a specific reaction with phosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin and dimethylphosphatidylethanolamine: the immunoreaction was found in the cytoplasm of maturing, hypertrophic and, to a lesser extent, proliferating and degenerating chondrocytes, at the periphery of calcification nodules, and at the periphery of the calcified matrix (Bonucci et al 1997). The presence of phospholipids in epiphyseal cartilage was confirmed by combining malachite green fixation with phospholipase A 2 -gold complex, a method which localizes phospholipids: the labeling intensity was higher at the periphery of the calcification nodules than in the central, fully calcified matrix (Silvestrini et al 1996;Zini et al 1996). The proteolipid/dry weight and proteolipid/total lipid ratios were greater in the lower than in the upper (resting) part of the epiphyseal cartilage (Boyan and Ritter 1984).…”