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1.
The heterogeneity of the CNBr-cleavage peptides of human types I, II, III and V collagens were studied by using two-dimensional electrophoresis combining non-equilibrium pH-gradient-gel electrophoresis and sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Specific 'maps' were produced by the peptides obtained from the chains of each type of collagen, and most peptides had at least three charged forms of the same molecular weight. Specific 'maps' were also produced by the peptides of types I, III and V collagens from insoluble dermis and the peptides of types I and V collagens from decalcified bone. The alpha 1(I) CB7 and alpha 1(I) CB8 and the alpha 2 CB4 peptides obtained from the type I collagens of these tissues contained the same number of charged components, but there was a relative increase in the more basic components in bone. Some aspects of the involvement of the alpha 1(I) CB6 and the alpha 1(III) CB9 peptides in cross-linkages were also studied. The recovery of the alpha 1(I) CB6 peptide from bone and dermis was decreased and the alpha 1(III) CB9 peptide was not detected in dermis. Additional peptides, which were probably cross-linked peptides involving the alpha 1(I) CB6 peptide, were also observed.  相似文献   

2.
Structurally abnormal type I collagen was identified in the dermis, bone, and cultured fibroblasts obtained from a baby with lethal perinatal osteogenesis imperfecta. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of the CNBr peptides demonstrated that the alpha 1(I)CB7 peptide from the alpha 1(I)-chain of type I collagen existed in a normal form and a mutant form with a more basic charge distribution. This heterozygous peptide defect was not detected in the collagens from either parent. The defect was localized to a 224-residue region at the NH2 terminus of the alpha 1(I)CB7 peptide by mammalian collagenase digestion. Analysis of unhydroxylated collagens produced in cell culture indicated that the mutant alpha 1(I)CB7 migrated faster on electrophoresis suggesting that the abnormality may be a small deletion or a mutation that alters sodium dodecyl sulfate binding. The post-translational hydroxylation of lysine residues was increased in the CB7 peptide and also in peptides CB3 and CB8 which are toward the NH2 terminus of the alpha 1(I)-chain. The COOH-terminal CB6 peptide was normally hydroxylated. These findings support the proposal that the lysine overhydroxylation resulted from a perturbation of helix propagation from the COOH to NH2 terminus of the collagen trimer caused by the structural defect in alpha 1(I)CB7.  相似文献   

3.
The collagens were studied in 13 normal and 19 myxomatous human mitral valves. The collagens of the valve were completely solubilized by using a method consisting of guanidinium chloride extraction, limited pepsin digestions and CNBr cleavage of the residue. The normal valves contained 74% type I, 24% type III and 2% type V collagen. The type I and type III collagens had similar solubility patterns, although only type I collagen was detected in the guanidinium chloride extract. Type V collagen was only detected in the first pepsin extract. The type I and III collagens had higher contents of hydroxylysine than did the same collagens from age-matched dermis. The two-dimensional electrophoretic 'maps' of CNBr-cleavage peptides showed low recoveries of the C-terminal alpha 1(I) CB6 and alpha 1(III) CB9 peptides, which are involved in forming intermolecular cross-linkages. Most of the reducible cross-linkages were present in large-Mr peptide complexes, and these complexes were shown by labelling with 125I to include the tyrosine-containing alpha 1(I) CB6 peptide. The myxomatous valves contained 67% type I, 31% type III and 2% type V collagens. There was a significant increase in the concentration of each type of collagen, which consisted of a 9% increase of type I collagen, a 53% increase of type III collagen and a 25% increase of type V collagen. The contents of hydroxylysine in type I and III collagens and the electrophoretic 'maps' of the CNBr-cleavage peptides involved in cross-linkages did not differ significantly from the results obtained from the normal valves. The biochemical findings suggest that there is an increased production of collagen, in particular type III collagen, and glycosaminoglycan as well as a proliferation of cells as part of a repair process in the myxomatous valves.  相似文献   

4.
The methods of quantitating the relative amounts of type I and III collagens in samples containing crosslinked collagen chains were evaluated using electrophoresis of alpha chains and cyanogen bromide peptides. The densitometry areas of the alpha I(I) chains from type I collagen and the alpha I(III) chains from type III collagen were reduced because of the failure of the crosslinked chains to dissociate. However, the ratios of the unit densitometry areas of these chains (area of chain/micrograms type I or III collagen loaded) were constant for type I and III collagens prepared from the same samples of tissue. A calibration factor, which was the same for dermis and mitral valve, was derived to convert the densitometry area ratios to the weight ratios of type I to III collagens. In contrast, the densitometry areas of the alpha I(I) CB8 (type I collagen marker) and the alpha I(III) CB5 (type III collagen marker) were not reduced by crosslinked collagen chains. A calibration factor was also derived to convert the ratios of the densitometry areas of the marker peptides to weight ratios of type I to type III collagens. Almost identical results were obtained when electrophoresis of alpha chains and of cyanogen bromide peptides was used with these calibration factors to quantitate the relative amounts of type I and III collagens in tissue extracts which contained different amounts of crosslinked chains.  相似文献   

5.
To understand more directly the tissue defect in osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), bone matrix was analyzed from an infant with lethal OI (type II) of defined mutation (collagen alpha 2(I)Gly580-->Asp). Pepsin-solubilized alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) chains and derived CNBr-peptides migrated more slowly on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis compared with normal human controls. The peptide alpha 2(I)CB3,5, predicted to contain the mutation site, ran as a retarded doublet band and was purified by high performance liquid chromatography and digested with V8 protease. Two peptides with amino-terminal sequences beginning at residue 576 of the alpha 2(I) chain were isolated. One had the normal sequence. The other differed in that aspartic acid replaced glycine at residue 580 as predicted from cDNA analysis, and in having an unhydroxylated proline at residue 579. From yields on microsequencing and the relative intensities of the two forms of alpha 2(I)CB3,5 on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the ratio of mutant to normal alpha 2(I) chains in the infant's bone matrix was 0.7/1. Although the effects of an efficient incorporation of mutant chains on the properties of the bone matrix are unknown, it may be that in this OI case the tissue abnormalities result more from the presence of mutant protein than from an underexpression of matrix.  相似文献   

6.
Fibril-forming collagens in lamprey   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Five types of collagen with triple-helical regions approximately 300 nm in length were found in lamprey tissues which show characteristic D-periodic collagen fibrils. These collagens are members of the fibril forming family of this primitive vertebrate. Lamprey collagens were characterized with respect to solubility, mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, carboxylmethyl-cellulose chromatography, peptide digestion patterns, composition, susceptibility to vertebrate collagenase, thermal stability, and segment long spacing-banding pattern. Comparison with fibril-forming collagens in higher vertebrates (types I, II, III, V, and XI) identified three lamprey collagens as types II, V, and XI. Both lamprey dermis and major body wall collagens had properties similar to type I but not the typical heterotrimer composition. Dermis molecules had only alpha 1(I)-like chains, while body wall molecules had alpha 2(I)-like chains combined with chains resembling lamprey type II. Neither collagen exhibited the interchain disulfide linkages or solubility properties of type III. The conservation of fibril organization in type II/type XI tissues in contrast to the major developments in type I and type III tissues after the divergence of lamprey and higher vertebrates is consistent with these results. The presence of type II and type I-like molecules as major collagens and types V and XI as minor collagens in the lamprey, and the differential susceptibility of these molecules to vertebrate collagenase is analogous to the findings in higher vertebrates.  相似文献   

7.
A baby with the lethal perinatal form of osteogenesis imperfecta was shown to have a structural defect in the alpha 1(I) chain of type I procollagen. Normal and mutant alpha 1(I) CB8 cyanogen bromide peptides, from the helical part of the alpha 1(I) chains, were purified from bone. Amino acid sequencing of tryptic peptides derived from the mutant alpha 1(I) CB8 peptide showed that the glycine residue at position 391 of the alpha 1(I) chain had been replaced by an arginine residue. This substitution accounted for the more basic charged form of this peptide that was observed on two-dimensional electrophoresis of the collagen peptides obtained from the tissues. The substitution was associated with increased enzymatic hydroxylation of lysine residues in the alpha 1(I) CB8 and the adjoining CB3 peptides but not in the carboxyl-terminal CB6 and CB7 peptides. This finding suggested that the sequence abnormality had interfered with the propagation of the triple helix across the mutant region. The abnormal collagen was not incorporated into the more insoluble fraction of bone collagen. The baby appeared to be heterozygous for the sequence abnormality and as the parents did not show any evidence of the defect it is likely that the baby had a new mutation of one allele of the pro-alpha 1(I) gene. The amino acid substitution could result from a single nucleotide mutation in the codon GGC (glycine) to produce the codon CGC (arginine).  相似文献   

8.
Cultured skin fibroblasts from seven consecutive cases of lethal perinatal osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) expressed defects of type I collagen metabolism. The secretion of [14C]proline-labelled collagen by the OI cells was specifically reduced (51-79% of control), and collagen degradation was increased to twice that of control cells in five cases and increased by approx. 30% in the other two cases. Sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis revealed that four of the OI cell lines produced two forms of type I collagen consisting of both normally and slowly migrating forms of the alpha 1(I)- and alpha 2(I)-chains. In the other three OI cell lines only the 'slow' alpha (I)'- and alpha 2(I)'-chains were detected. In both groups inhibition of the post-translational modifications of proline and lysine resulted in the production of a single species of type I collagen with normal electrophoretic migration. Proline hydroxylation was normal, but the hydroxylysine contents of alpha 1(I)'- and alpha 2(I)'-chains purified by h.p.l.c. were greater than in control alpha-chains. The glucosylgalactosylhydroxylysine content was increased approx. 3-fold while the galactosylhydroxylysine content was only slightly increased in the alpha 1(I)'-chains relative to control alpha 1(I)-chains. Peptide mapping of the CNBr-cleavage peptides provided evidence that the increased post-translational modifications were distributed throughout the alpha 1(I)'- and alpha 2(I)'-chains. It is postulated that the greater modification of these chains was due to structural defects of the alpha-chains leading to delayed helix formation. The abnormal charge heterogeneity observed in the alpha 1 CB8 peptide of one patient may reflect such a structural defect in the type I collagen molecule.  相似文献   

9.
The adhesion of human and rabbit platelets to collagens and collagen-derived fragments immobilized on plastic was investigated. Adhesion appeared to be independent of collagen conformation, since similar attachment occurred to collagen (type I) in monomeric form, as fibres or in denatured state. The adhesion of human platelets was stimulated to a variable degree by Mg2+, but rabbit platelet adhesion showed little if any dependence on this cation. Collagens type I, III, V and VI were all able to support adhesion, although that to collagen type V (native) was lower than that to the other collagens. Adhesion to a series of peptides derived from collagens I and III was measured. Attachment did not require the presence of peptides in triple-helical configuration. The extent of adhesion ranged from relatively high, as good as to the intact parent collagen molecule, to little if any adhesive activity beyond the non-specific (background) level. The existence of very different degrees of activity suggests that platelet adhesion is associated with specific structural sites in the collagen molecule. Adhesion in many instances was essentially in accord with the known platelet-aggregatory activity of individual peptides. However, two peptides, alpha 1(I)CB3 and alpha 1(III)CB1,8,10,2, exhibited good adhesive activity although possessing little if any aggregatory activity. Of particular interest, despite its near-total lack of aggregatory activity, adhesion to peptide alpha 1(I)CB3 was as good as that to the structurally homologous peptide alpha 1(III)CB4, in which is located a highly reactive aggregatory site. This implies that platelet adhesion to collagen may involve sites in the collagen molecule distinct from those more directly associated with aggregation.  相似文献   

10.
The oim mouse is a model of human Osteogenesis Imperfecta (OI) that has deficient synthesis of proalpha2(I) chains. Cells isolated from oim mice synthesize alpha1(I) collagen homotrimers that accumulate in tissues. To explore the feasibility of gene therapy for OI, a murine proalpha2(I) cDNA was inserted into an adenovirus vector and transferred into bone marrow stromal cells isolated from oim mice femurs. The murine cDNA under the control of the cytomegalovirus early promoter was expressed by the transduced cells. Analysis of the collagens synthesized by the transduced cells demonstrated that the cells synthesized stable type I collagen comprised of alpha1(I) and alpha2(I) heterotrimers in the correct ratio of 2:1. The collagen was efficiently secreted and also the cells retained the osteogenic potential as indicated by the expression of alkaline phosphatase activity when the transduced cells were treated with recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein 2. Injection of the virus carrying the murine proalpha2(I) cDNA into oim skin demonstrated synthesis of type I collagen comprised of alpha1 and alpha2 chains at the injection site. These preliminary data demonstrate that collagen genes can be transferred into bone marrow stromal cells as well as fibroblasts in vivo and that the genes are efficiently expressed. These data encourage further studies in gene replacement for some forms of OI and use of bone marrow stromal cells as vehicles to deliver therapeutic genes to bone.  相似文献   

11.
Analyses were made of the minor collagens synthesized by cultures of chondrocytes derived from 14-day chick embryo sterna. Comparisons were made between control cultures, cultures grown for 9 days in 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) and clones of chondrocytes grown to senescence. Separation of minor collagens from interstitial collagens was achieved by differential salt precipitation in the presence of carrier collagens in acid conditions. The precipitate at 0.9 M NaCl 0.5 M acetic acid from control cultures was shown by CNBr peptide analysis to contain only the alpha 1(II) chain of type II collagen, whereas after BrdU treatment or growth to senescence synthesis of only alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) chains occurred. The synthesis of type III collagen was not detected. Analysis of the precipitate at 2.0 M NaCl, 0.5 M HAc from control cultures demonstrated the synthesis of 1 alpha, 2 alpha and 3 alpha chains together with the synthesis of short chain (SC) collagen of Mr 43000 after pepsin digestion. After BrdU treatment or growth to senescence alpha chains were isolated which possessed the migration positions on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), or the elution positions on CM-cellulose chromatography, of the alpha 1(V) and alpha 2(V) chains of type V collagen. In addition, for BrdU-treated but not for control cultures, intracellular immunofluorescent staining was observed with a monoclonal antibody which specifically recognizes an epitope present in the triple helix of type V collagen. Synthesis of short chain (SC) collagen was not detected after BrdU treatment or growth to senescence. These results suggest that chick chondrocytes grown in conditions known to cause switching of collagen synthesis from type II to type I collagen also undergo a switch from the synthesis of 1 alpha, 2 alpha and 3 alpha chains to the synthesis of the alpha 1(V) and alpha 2(V) chains of type V collagen. It appears that there are several cartilage-specific collagens which together undergo a regulatory control to the synthesis of collagens typical of other connective tissues.  相似文献   

12.
A structural defect in the alpha 2(I) chain of type I collagen was characterized in a new case of the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VII. The patient's skin, fascia, and bone collagens all showed an abnormal additional chain, pN-alpha 2(I)s, running slower than the alpha 2(I) chain on electrophoresis. The extension was shown to be on the amino-terminal fragment of pN-alpha (I)s by cleavage with human collagenase, but pepsin was unable to convert pN-alpha 2(I)s to alpha 2(I). Skin collagen was 4-fold more extractable and contained fewer beta-dimers and a lower concentration of cross-linking amino acids than control skin collagen. Electron micrographs of both dermis and bone showed markedly irregular ragged outlines of the collagen fibrils in cross-section, although the patient had no clinical signs of bone disease. Procollagen secreted by her skin fibroblasts in culture showed equal amounts of the normal and abnormal alpha 2(I) chains on pepsin digestion. Before pepsin, the pN-alpha 2(I) component ran as a doublet on electrophoresis; pepsin removed only the normal slower chain. The suspected deletion in pN-alpha 2(I)s was traced by CNBr peptide analysis to the N-propeptide fragment, which behaved on electrophoresis about 15-20 residues smaller than that from the normal pN-alpha 2(I) chain. The simplest genetic explanation is a spontaneous heterozygote in which one normal and one abnormal allele for the pro-alpha 2(I) gene are expressed, the protein defect being a deletion of the junction domain that spans the N-propeptidase cleavage site and the N-telopeptide cross-linking sequence.  相似文献   

13.
The dermis of a child with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV (EDS-IV) contained about 11% of the normal amount of type III collagen and cultured dermal fibroblasts produced a reduced amount of type III procollagen which was secreted poorly. Type III collagen produced by these cells contained normal and abnormal alpha-chains and cyanogen bromide peptides. The site of the structural defect in the abnormal alpha 1 (III) chains was localized to the region of Met797, which is at the junction of the two carboxyl-terminal CB5 and CB9 cyanogen bromide peptides. Chemical cleavage of heteroduplexes formed between EDS-IV mRNA and a normal cDNA clone covering the CB5 and CB9 region showed that about 100 nucleotides were mismatched. Sequencing of amplified and cloned cDNA spanning the mutant region revealed a 108 nucleotide deletion corresponding to amino acid residues Gly775 to Lys810. The deleted nucleotide sequence corresponded to sequences that, by analogy to the organization of the type I collagen genes, should be precisely encoded by exon 41 of the COL3A1 gene. Sequencing of amplified genomic DNA, prepared using disimilar amounts of primers specific for exons 41 and 42, displayed a base substitution (G-to-A) in the highly conserved GT dinucleotide of the 5' splice site of intron 41. Normal sequences were also obtained from the normal allele. It is likely that the GT-to-AT transition at the splice donor site of intron 41 generated an abnormally spliced mRNA in which sequences of exon 40 and 42 were joined together with maintenance of the reading frame. The corresponding peptide deletion included the cyanogen bromide cleavage site Met797-Pro798 and the mammalian collagenase cleavage site at Gly781-Ile782. These losses account for the resistance of EDS-IV collagen to cyanogen bromide and mammalian collagenase digestion. Cultured fibroblasts produced normal homotrimer, mutant homotrimer, and mixed heterotrimer type III collagen molecules. The mutant homotrimer molecules were the major pepsin-resistant species and about 69% of the alpha 1(III) mRNA was in the mutant form.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Partial covalent structure of the human alpha 2 type V collagen chain   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Human cDNA libraries were screened with a cDNA fragment presumably encoding the 3' terminus of a procollagen carboxyl propeptide not identifiable as types I, II, III, or IV by protein sequence or Northern blot hybridization. One clone contained a 1350-base pair insert coding in part for 55 uninterrupted Gly-X-Y triplets. Comparison with the amino acid composition of the COOH-terminal cyanogen bromide (CB) peptides of the alpha 1 and alpha 2 type V collagen chains showed similarity only to the alpha 2(V)CB fragment. To identify the NH2 terminus of the peptide designated by methionine, an additional isolate was sequenced and found to contain a Gly-Met-Pro triplet. Thirty-one amino acids from the NH2 terminus of the alpha 2(V)CB9 fragment were then determined by Edman degradation and found to be identical to those derived from the cDNA clone. The DNA sequence encoding part of the triple helical region establishes for the first time the partial structure of a type V collagen chain. Although comparison of residues 796-1020 of the alpha 2(V) collagenous region with alpha 1 (III), alpha 1(I), and alpha 2(I) shows strong conservation of charged positions, the latter three chains appear considerably more similar to each other than to alpha 2(V). A striking feature of the alpha 2(V) sequence between 918-944 is the absence of proline residues. In the analogous region of alpha 1(I) where this amino acid is also lacking, a flexible site in the rigid triple helical structure of type I collagen has been observed (Hofmann, H., Voss, T., Kuhn, K. and Engel, J. (1984) J. Mol. Biol. 172, 325-343).  相似文献   

16.
The degradation rates of type I, II, and III collagens by tadpole collagenase were studied by measuring the viscosity of the solution and the contents of alpha chains and alpha A chains of collagen, using SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by densitometric analysis of the separated peptide bands. An empirical parameter was derived from the viscosity, and was shown to change in parallel with the content of alpha chains upon incubation with tadpole collagenase almost to the stage of complete digestion of collagen. Linear plots of parameters reflecting the concentration of intact collagen molecules against time were obtained, indicating the degradation to be pseudo-first order. The first-order rate constants for the degradation of Type I, II, and III collagens with tadpole collagenase at 30, 25, and 20 degrees C gave activation energies of 60 kcal/mol for Type III collagen and 40 kcal/mol for Type I and II collagens. There appeared to be a dependency of the degradation rates on the conformation of the collagen molecules (which is affected by temperature).  相似文献   

17.
We have examined the collagenous proteins extracted from skin and produced by skin fibroblast cultures from the members of a family with mild dominant osteogenesis imperfecta (OI type I). The two affected patients, mother and son, produce two populations of alpha 1(I) chains of type I collagen, one chain being normal, the other containing a cysteine within the triple-helical domain. Both forms can be incorporated into triple-helical molecules with an alpha 2(I) chain. When two mutant alpha (I) chains are incorporated into the same molecule, a disulfide bonded dimer is produced. We have characterized these chains by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis and CNBr-peptide mapping and by measuring a number of biosynthetic and physical variables. The cysteine was localized to the COOH-terminal peptide alpha (I) CB6. Molecules containing the mutant chains are stable, have a normal denaturation temperature, are secreted normally, and have normal levels of post-translational modification of lysyl residues and intracellular degradation. We have compared and contrasted these observations with those made in a patient with lethal osteogenesis imperfecta in which there was a cysteine substitution in alpha 1(I) CB6 (Steinmann, B., Rao, V. H., Vogel, A., Bruckner, P., Gitzelmann, R., and Byers, P. H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem 259, 11129-11138) and have concluded that the mutation in the present family occurs in the X or Y position of a Gly-X-Y repeating unit of collagen and not in the glycine position shown for the previous patient (Cohn, D. H., Byers, P. H., Steinmann, B, and Gelinas, R. E. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A., in press.  相似文献   

18.
Insoluble collagen was prepared from bovine periodontal ligament. Isolation and characterization of CNBr peptides originating from the alpha1(I), alpha2, and alpha1(III) chains showed that the tissue contained both type I and type III collagens. Further evidence for the presence of type III collagen was obtained by the isolation of alpha1(III) chains from pepsin-treated ligament collagen, with properties similar to those of human alpha1(III) chains. Estimates based on the amounts of certain CNBr peptides indicated that about one-fifth of the collagen of periodontal ligament is type III, the remainder being type I collagen.  相似文献   

19.
We studied the expression of osteoblastic markers in cultured cells isolated from the bone of 15 patients with different clinical forms of osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) and of seven fetal and postnatal controls. Cultured bone cells of ten OI patients produced abnormal collagen type I. Similar to controls, OI bone cells produced predominantly collagen type I with traces of collagen types III and V. The 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3-stimulated synthesis of osteocalcin, a specific osteoblastic marker protein, was similar in OI bone cells and age-matched controls. Bone cells from fetal controls and from patients with the perinatal lethal OI type II produced less osteocalcin than bone cells from postnatal controls and surviving OI patients. OI bone cells responded to parath.yroid hormone (PTH) by increased production of cAMP similar to controls. Bone cells from fetal controls and from OI type II donors showed a decreased response to PTH. Activity of the bone-liver-kidney isoenzyme alkaline phosphatase (AP) was detected in all control and OI bone cells. The expression of all osteoblastic markers was similar in bone cells producing abnormal collagen type I. These observations show that OI bone cells in vitro express a pattern of osteoblastic markers similar to age-matched control bone cells indicating that osteoblastic differentiation is not altered by the underlying defects of collagen type I metabolism in OI bone cells. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Tissue-specific assembly of fibers composed of the major collagen types I and II depends in part on the formation of heterotypic fibrils, using the quantitatively minor collagens V and XI. Here we report the identification of a new fibrillar-like collagen chain that is related to the fibrillar alpha1(V), alpha1(XI), and alpha2(XI) collagen polypeptides and which is coexpressed with type I collagen in the developing bone and eye. The new collagen was designated the alpha1(XXIV) chain and consists of a long triple helical domain flanked by typical propeptide-like sequences. The carboxyl propeptide is classic, with 8 conserved cysteine residues. The amino-terminal peptide contains a thrombospodin-N-terminal-like (TSP) motif and a highly charged segment interspersed with several tyrosine residues, like the fibril diameter-regulating collagen chains alpha1(V) and alpha1(XI). However, a short imperfection in the triple helix makes alpha1(XXIV) unique from other chains of the vertebrate fibrillar collagen family. The triple helical interruption and additional select features in both terminal peptides are common to the fibrillar chains of invertebrate organisms. Based on these data, we propose that collagen XXIV is an ancient molecule that may contribute to the regulation of type I collagen fibrillogenesis at specific anatomical locations during fetal development.  相似文献   

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