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As type IX collagen is a minor cartilage component, it is difficult to purify sufficient amounts of it from tissues or cultured cells to study its structure and function. Also, the conventional pepsin digestion used for fibrillar collagens cannot be utilized for purifying type IX collagen, because it contains several interruptions in its collagenous triple helix. A baculovirus expression system was used here to produce recombinant human type IX collagen by coinfecting insect cells with three viruses containing full-length cDNAs for the alpha1(IX), alpha2(IX), and alpha3(IX) collagen chains together with a double promoter virus for the alpha and beta subunits of human prolyl 4-hydroxylase. Correctly folded recombinant type IX collagen was secreted, consisting of the three alpha chains in a 1:1:1 ratio and showing the expected biphasic thermal melting profile. When the individual alpha chains were expressed, disulfide-bonded homotrimers and homodimers of the alpha chains were observed. When the cells were coinfected with the viruses for all three alpha chains, heterotrimers of alpha1(IX), alpha2(IX), and alpha3(IX) were detected in cell culture medium, and the other possible combinations were less prominent. When any two of the alpha chains were co-expressed, in addition to the homodimers and homotrimers, only alpha1(IX) and alpha3(IX) chains were disulfide-bonded. The results thus suggest that the most favored molecular species is an alpha1(IX)alpha2(IX)alpha3(IX) heterotrimer, but the chains are also able to form disulfide-bonded heterotrimers of alpha1(IX) and alpha3(IX) chains and (alpha1(IX))(3), (alpha2(IX))(3), and (alpha3(IX))(3) homotrimers.  相似文献   

4.
Type IX collagen in cartilage consists of molecules composed of three genetically distinct polypeptide subunits. One of the subunits, alpha 2(IX), contains a covalently attached glycosaminoglycan side chain whereas a second subunit, alpha 1(IX), contains a large noncollagenous, amino-terminal domain called NC4. In this report, we describe for the first time the complete primary structure of this noncollagenous domain, based on cloning and sequencing of cDNA and genomic DNA as well as amino acid sequencing of tryptic peptides. Analysis of genomic clones has also allowed determination of the exon structure of NC4. Our results demonstrate that the noncollagenous, amino-terminal domain of alpha 1(IX) chains contains 266 amino acid residues (including the signal peptide) with 5 cysteinyl residues forming two disulfide bridges. The domain is basic with an estimated pI of 9.7, thus supporting the idea that it may participate in ionic interactions with polyanionic glycosaminoglycans in cartilage. Both the sequence and exon structure of the NC4 domain is unique among collagens and there is no obvious homology with the noncollagenous domains of other types of collagen, including the propeptides of fibrillar collagens.  相似文献   

5.
We have isolated and characterized a cDNA encoding the carboxy-terminal half of one of the polypeptide subunits of a novel disulfide-bonded collagen found in hyaline cartilage. This collagen has been given the type assignment type IX, and it has several unusual characteristics. First, the polypeptide subunits are shorter than alpha-chains of the fibrillar collagens types I, II, and III. Second, type IX molecules are heterotrimers of three genetically distinct polypeptide subunits. Third, type IX molecules contain three triple-helical collagenous domains interspersed with noncollagenous domains. When chicken cartilage collagens are extracted with pepsin, type IX collagen is cleaved and gives rise to the triple-helical fragments HMW and LMW. The identification of the cDNA reported here is based on a comparison of the amino acid composition of tryptic peptides derived from LMW with the composition of tryptic peptides predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA. We also show that the amino-terminal sequence of one of the subunits of LMW is identical with the sequence predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA. Finally, we demonstrate that the amino-terminal amino acid sequence of a tryptic peptide isolated from one of the subunits of HMW is identical with a sequence predicted from the cDNA. We have given the polypeptide chain encoded by the cDNA reported here the name alpha 2(IX), and we show that it is homologous to the alpha 1(IX) chain previously characterized by us.  相似文献   

6.
Type IX collagen is a recently characterized product of chondrocytes. The molecules of this collagen are heterotrimers of three genetically distinct polypeptide chains. One of the three chains contains chondroitin and/or dermatan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains, giving the molecule a proteoglycan character. In fact, Type IX collagen has been identified with the proteoglycan Lt (PG-Lt), first isolated by Noro, A., Kimata, K., Oike, Y., Shinomura, T., Maeda, N., Yano, S., Takahashi, N., and Suzuki, S. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 9323-9331 from chick embryonic tibia and femur. Based on amino acid sequences predicted from the nucleotide sequences of cDNA and genomic clones specific for two of the chains of Type IX collagen, we have synthesized oligopeptides representing portions of the two chains. In addition, an oligopeptide has been made based on a partial amino acid sequence of the third chain. Antibodies against the synthetic peptides have been generated in rabbits, and the polyclonal sera have allowed identification of the three genetically distinct polypeptide subunits of Type IX collagen. In addition, labeling with [35S]sulfate and treatment with chondroitinase ABC demonstrates that glycosaminoglycan chains are present on the subunit that has been given the designation alpha 2(IX).  相似文献   

7.
Type IX collagen functions in covalent cross-linkage to type II collagen in cartilage (Eyre, D. R., Apone, S., Wu, J. J., Ericsson, L. H., and Walsh, K. A. (1987) FEBS Lett. 220, 337-341). To understand this molecular relationship better, an analysis of all cross-linking sites labeled by [3H]borohydride was undertaken using the protein prepared from fetal bovine cartilage. Sequence analysis of tryptic peptides containing the 3H-labeled cross-links showed that each of the chains of type IX collagen, alpha 1(IX), alpha 2(IX), and alpha 3(IX), contained a site of cross-linking at the amino terminus of the COL2 triple-helix to which the alpha 1(II)N-telopeptide could bond. The alpha 3(IX)COL2 domain alone also had an attachment site for the alpha 1(II)C-telopeptide. The distance between the alpha 1(II)N-telopeptide and alpha 1(II)C-telopeptide interaction sites, 137 residues, is equal to the length of the hole zone (0.6D) in a type II collagen fibril. This implies an antiparallel type II to type IX cross-linking relationship. Peptide analysis also revealed an unknown amino acid sequence linked to the COL2 cross-linking domains in both the alpha 1(IX) and alpha 3(IX) chains. Using antibodies to this novel peptide, its origin in the collagen alpha 3(IX)NC1 domain was established. In summary, the results confirm extensive covalent cross-linking between type IX and type II collagen molecules and reveal the existence of type IX-type IX bonding. These data provide a molecular basis for the proposed function of type IX collagen as a critical contributor to the mechanical stability and resistance to swelling of the collagen type II fibril framework of cartilage.  相似文献   

8.
Type IX collagen is a quantitatively minor component of hyaline cartilage that is essential for the normal structural integrity of the tissue. Purification and analysis are difficult because the mature protein is insoluble as a cross-linked integral component of the fibrillar matrix. In order to view a peptide map of the total pool of type IX collagen in a cartilage sample, a selective method based on Western blot analysis was developed for displaying collagen IX peptides in a cyanogen bromide digest of tissue. Digests were partially resolved by reverse-phase HPLC, individual fractions were run on SDS-PAGE and then transblotted to membrane, and the collagen IX fragments were revealed using an anti-collagen IX rabbit antiserum. All major CB-peptides from alpha1(IX), alpha2(IX), and alpha3(IX) chains in the resulting two-dimensional display were identified by amino-terminal sequence analysis. Cross-linked peptides originating from sites of covalent interaction between collagen types IX and II and between IX and IX were also defined. By comparison with an analysis of soluble type IX collagen from chondrocyte culture medium, the results showed that the pool of type IX collagen molecules in fetal and adult human cartilage is extensively cross-linked intermolecularly at sites previously revealed by other methods using purified protein. This sensitive, direct method has the potential to screen for abnormalities in the content and properties of type IX collagen in tissue samples, for example, in the study of heritable chondrodysplasia syndromes and the pathogenesis of cartilage destruction in osteoarthritis.  相似文献   

9.
Type XII collagen is a member of the FACIT (fibril-associated collagens with interrupted triple helices) group of extracellular matrix proteins. Like the other members of this group, collagen types IX and XIV, type XII has alternating triple-helical and non-triple-helical domains. Because of its structure, its association with collagen fibrils, and its distribution in dense connective tissues, type XII is thought possibly to act as a cross-bridge between fibrils and resist shear forces caused by tension. A portion of the ffuse gene was isolated by screening a genomic library with a chicken alpha 1 (XII) cDNA probe, followed by subcloning and sequence analysis. Comparison of exon sequences with the sequence of a mouse cDNA clone allowed the mouse gene to be identified as the alpha 1 (XII) collagen gene. In the mouse, Col12a1 is located on chromosome 9, as determined by linkage analysis using DNA from interspecific backcrosses with Mus spretus. Screening of a human genomic library also allowed the isolation of a human alpha 1(XII)-like gene (CoL12A1). This gene was mapped to chromosome 6 by blot hybridization to DNA from human/hamster hybrid cell lines. This information should prove useful in determining the role of type XII collagen genes as candidate genes in inheritable connective tissue diseases.  相似文献   

10.
Type IX collagen has recently been shown to contain glycosaminoglycan chain(s) and furthermore to be immunologically identical with proteoglycan Lt (Vaughan, L., Winterhalter, K. H., and Bruckner, P. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 4758-4763). Here we demonstrate that the chondroitin sulfate carrying 115-kDa polypeptide of type IX collagen corresponds to the alpha 2(IX) chain. In addition the 84- and 68-kDa polypeptides were identified as the alpha 1(IX) and the alpha 3(IX) chains, respectively. This conclusion is based on a comparison of the tryptic fingerprints of the 84-, 115-, and 68-kDa chains of type IX collagen on high performance liquid chromatography with the similarly treated C2, C3, and C5 chains of the peptic fragment HMW. In addition, we provide evidence that both the C3 and C4 components of HMW are derived from the alpha 2(IX) chain.  相似文献   

11.
Type VI collagen is a heterotrimer composed of three polypeptide chains, alpha 1(VI), alpha 2(VI), and alpha 3(VI). By immunological screening of an expression cDNA library, human cDNAs specific for each chain were isolated and characterized. Major mRNA species encoding these chains have a size of 4.2 kb (alpha 1), 3.5 kb (alpha 2), and 8.5 kb (alpha 3). The cDNA clones were also used to map the genes on human chromosomes by somatic cell hybrid analysis and in situ hybridization. The alpha 1 (VI) and alpha 2(VI) collagen genes were both located on chromosome 21, in band q223. This represents a third example of a possible physical proximity of two collagen loci. The alpha 3(VI) collagen gene was localized to chromosome 2, in the region 2q37. The alpha 3(VI) collagen gene is the fifth extracellular matrix gene to be localized to 2q, as four other extracellular matrix genes--i.e., the alpha 1(III) and alpha 2(V) collagen genes, the elastin gene, and the fibronectin gene--have been previously mapped to the distal region of the long arm of chromosome 2.  相似文献   

12.
The structure of type IX collagen   总被引:26,自引:0,他引:26  
We present a detailed analysis both of tryptic peptides and amino-terminal sequences of the subunits of two collagenous fragments (HMW and LMW) previously isolated from pepsin extracts of chicken cartilage (Reese, C.A., and Mayne, R. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 5443-5448). This analysis and a comparison with the nucleotide sequence of the cDNApYN1738 (Ninomiya, Y., and Olsen, B.R. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 81, 3014-3018) shows that HMW and LMW are pepsin-resistant fragments of a unique collagen composed of molecules with three different polypeptide chains (alpha-chains). This collagen has been assigned the type number IX, and the alpha-chain encoded by pYN1738 has been given the designation alpha 1 (IX). Type IX collagen contains three triple-helical domains and at least two sets of interchain disulfide bridges. At the amino and carboxyl ends are noncollagenous domains which do not appear to be homologous to amino and carboxyl propeptides of interstitial collagens.  相似文献   

13.
1. Collagens were extracted from bovine cartilage by 4 M-guanidinium chloride in the presence of proteinase inhibitors and identified by immunoblotting with specific anti-collagen sera. 2. The collagens retained their native conformations (shown by the resistance of their triple-helical domains to pepsin digestion), and the molecular masses of their component alpha-chains indicated that the chains were intact. 3. Type VI collagen was extracted as a large-molecular-mass disulphide-bonded aggregate composed of components of molecular mass 140 kDa and 200-240 kDa, and was therefore similar to type VI collagen identified in noncartilaginous tissues. Immunoblotting established the 200-240 kDa components as intact forms of the alpha 3(VI) chain. 4. Type IX collagen consisted of three clearly separable components of molecular mass 84 kDa, 72 kDa and 66 kDa, which were assigned to the alpha 1(IX)-, alpha 3(IX)- and alpha 2(IX)-chains respectively, and a large proportion of this collagen had no covalently bound glycosaminoglycan attached to the alpha 2(IX)-chain. 5. Differences between the type IX collagen extracted from bovine cartilage and that identified in biosynthetic studies on chick cartilage are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Sites of stromelysin cleavage in collagen types II, IX, X, and XI of cartilage   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Human recombinant stromelysin-1 was shown to cleave four types of collagen (types II, IX, X, and XI) prepared from bovine and rat cartilages at specific sites. Stromelysin-1 cleaved salt-soluble native molecules of type IX collagen into two main triple-helical fragments, COL1 and COL2,3. Protein microsequencing identified the exact cleavage sites in the NC2 domain of all three chains, alpha 1(IX), alpha 2(IX), and alpha 3(IX). Stromelysin-1 also acted as a "telopeptidase," in that it efficiently clipped intact molecules of types II and XI collagens at sites just inside their terminal cross-linking hydroxylysine residues. Native molecules of type X collagen were cleaved by stromelysin-1 within their triple helical domains at a COOH-terminal site that reduced the alpha 1(X) chain size by 10 kDa. These findings suggest an important role for stromelysin in the turnover and remodeling of the collagenous matrix of cartilage both normally and in degenerative joint disease.  相似文献   

15.
Three overlapping cDNAs encoding alpha 1 (XII) collagen have been isolated and sequenced. The DNAs define five sequence domains within the chain. Three domains are nontriple-helical; two are relatively short triple-helical regions. The amino acid sequences of tryptic peptides derived from 16- and 10-kDa pepsin-resistant fragments isolated from tendon extracts are in full agreement with the deduced sequences of the triple-helical regions. Two of the five sequence domains in alpha 1 (XII), one triple-helical and one nontriple-helical, show a high degree of similarity to regions in type IX collagen chains. In addition, examination of seven exons in the alpha 1 (XII) gene shows that the gene is, in part, similar to the structure of type IX collagen genes. Therefore, collagen types IX and XII are partially homologous. The alpha 1 (XII) sequence data predict an asymmetric structure for type XII collagen molecules, fully consistent with the rotary shadowing images. These images show a triple-helical 75-nm tail attached through a central globule to three finger-like structures, each 60 nm long (Dublet, B., Oh, S., Sugrue, S. P., Gordon, M. K., Gerecke, D. R., Olsen, B. R., and van der Rest, M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 13150-13156).  相似文献   

16.
Type IX collagen from chick embryonic cartilage is unique among the collagens in that it contains chondroitin sulfate covalently linked to the alpha 2(IX) polypeptide chain. We have isolated and sequenced the glycosaminoglycan-containing peptide released by collagenase digestion from type IX collagen, labeled biosynthetically with [35SO4] and 3H-aminoacids. This peptide was purified by gel filtration and, following chondroitinase ABC digestion, by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The amino acid sequence obtained for this peptide has 23 residues, beginning and ending with a collagenous sequence, indicating that it spans an internal noncollagenous domain. Comparison of this sequence with the one predicted from cDNA clone pYN 1738 for the alpha 1(IX)chain and pYN 1731 and pDM 222 for the alpha 2(IX)chain revealed the peptide to be the noncollagenous NC3 domain of alpha 2(IX). The glycosylated sequence Val-Glu-Gly-Ser*-Ala-Asp- of type IX collagen does not have the Ser-Gly normally functioning as the attachment sequence but does have an acidic residue preceding the serine which should improve the acceptability of this sequence for the xylosyltransferase. That it is an adequate acceptor can be inferred from the observation that type IX collagen carries a glycosaminoglycan chain on over 70% of the molecules isolated.  相似文献   

17.
A novel type IV collagen, alpha 3(IV), has recently been identified in human and bovine basement membranes. Here we describe the cloning and sequencing of a cDNA encoding 218 residues of the NC1 domain of the human alpha 3(IV) chain. Of interest is the possible role of abnormalities of the alpha 3(IV) chain in Alport syndrome, as suggested by the failure to detect the NC1 domain of alpha 3(IV) in the basement membranes of some Alport syndrome patients. To determine whether the alpha 3(IV) gene (COL4A3) may be mutated in Alport syndrome, we localized it, by somatic cell hybrid analysis and in situ hybridization of metaphase chromosomes, to chromosome 2q35-2q37. Mutations in alpha 3(IV) cannot therefore be responsible for the vast majority of cases of Alport syndrome, which have been shown to be X linked. One explanation for the immunochemical data implicating alpha 3(IV) in Alport syndrome pathogenesis is that mutations of the alpha 5(IV) chain, which has been localized to Xq22 and found to be mutated in at least three kindreds with Alport syndrome, lead to failure to incorporate the alpha 3(IV) chains into the multimeric structure of glomerular basement membrane in a stable fashion.  相似文献   

18.
A 1.8-kb cDNA encoding portion of a novel collagenous chain was isolated from a human rhabdomyosarcoma cell line by cross-hybridization using a chicken type V collagen probe. Sequence analysis suggests that this chain belongs to the recently discovered group of collagens, termed the FACIT class of macromolecules. This cDNA was used to locate the corresponding gene (D6S228E) to chromosome 6, notably at position 6q12-q14. Interestingly, within this region of human chromosome 6 residues the alpha 1 (IX) collagen gene (COL9A1), a member of the FACIT group.  相似文献   

19.
Type IV collagen is a major structural component of basement membranes. Four constituent polypeptides have been described and characterized to different degrees. Whereas the primary structure of the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains has been completely established, only short protein sequences have been reported for the recently recognized alpha 3(IV) and alpha 4(IV) subunits. We have isolated overlapping human cDNA clones whose derived amino acid sequence is highly homologous to the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains. However, these clones code for neither alpha 3(IV) nor alpha 4(IV), and thus this new polypeptide has been designated the alpha 5 chain of type IV collagen. To determine whether the gene encoding the alpha 5(IV) chain is syntenic with the contiguously arranged alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) genes at 13q34, the alpha 5(IV) cloned DNA was hybridized to genomic DNA from somatic cell hybrids and to metaphase chromosomes. The results demonstrated that the alpha 5(IV) collagen gene is located on the long arm of the X chromosome. Since 14 collagen genes have previously been assigned to nine autosomes, these data represent the first mapping of a collagen gene to the X chromosome. Most important, the alpha 5(IV) gene has been sublocalized to bands Xq22----q23, which are in the same region known to contain the locus for the X-linked form of Alport syndrome. It is therefore possible that this severe dominantly inherited nephritis, manifested by splitting of the glomerular basement membrane, could be caused by mutations in the alpha 5(IV) collagen gene.  相似文献   

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