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We have isolated a cDNA clone (pRcol 2) which is complementary to the 5'-terminal portion of the rat pro-alpha 1(II) chain mRNA. A synthetic oligonucleotide was used both as a primer for cDNA synthesis and as a probe for screening a cDNA library. The probe was a mixture of sixteen 14-mers deduced from an amino acid sequence present in the amino-terminal telopeptide of the rat cartilage alpha 1(II) chain. This primer was chosen so that the resulting cDNA would contain the sequence of the 5' end of the mRNA. The nucleotide sequences of the cDNA were determined and compared with that of three other interstitial procollagen chain mRNAs (pro-alpha 1(I), pro-alpha 2(I), and pro-alpha 1(III) chain mRNA). pRcol 2 contains a 521-base pair (bp) insert, including 153 bp of the 5' untranslated region plus 368 bp coding for the signal peptide, the amino-terminal propeptide, and a part of the telopeptide. The signal peptide of the type II collagen chain is composed of about 20 amino acids. There is little homology between the amino acid sequence of the signal peptide in the pro-alpha 1(II) chain and that of three other interstitial procollagen chains. The NH2-terminal propeptide is deduced to contain short nonhelical sequences at its amino and carboxyl ends and an internal helical collagenous domain comprising 25 repeats of Gly-X-Y with one interruption. There is a strong conservation of the amino acid sequence of the carboxyl-terminal part of the NH2-terminal propeptide in the pro-alpha 1(II), pro-alpha 1(I), and pro-alpha 2(I) chains. Type II collagen mRNA does not contain a sequence corresponding to a uniquely conserved nucleotide sequence around the translation initiation site which occurs in mRNA for other procollagen chains.  相似文献   

3.
M H Finer  H Boedtker  P Doty 《Gene》1987,56(1):71-78
As a first step in isolating the 5' end of the chicken pro alpha 1(I) collagen gene, we constructed cDNA clones complementary to the 5' end of the pro alpha 1(I) mRNA using synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides complementary to a conserved region within the N-terminal telopeptide as primers. cDNA clones corresponding to the 5'-untranslated region, signal peptide, N-propeptide and telopeptide were identified based on homology with the human pro alpha 1(I) collagen protein sequence, and on hybridization to pro alpha 1(I) mRNA on Northern blots. A comparison of the nucleotide sequence of these clones with the sequence of the 5' end of the pro alpha 2(I) collagen mRNA confirms that there is 84% homology in a 49-bp region surrounding the translation start point, and shows that there is 70% homology in the nucleotide sequences encoding the N-propeptide triple helical region of the two type-I collagen chains.  相似文献   

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A codon frameshift mutation caused by a single base (U) insertion after base pair 4088 of prepro alpha 1(I) mRNA of type I procollagen was identified in a baby with lethal perinatal osteogenesis imperfecta. The mutation was identified in fibroblast RNA by a new method that allows the direct detection of mismatched bases by chemical modification and cleavage in heteroduplexes formed between mRNA and control cDNA probes. The region of mismatches was specifically amplified by the polymerase chain reaction and sequenced. The heterozygous mutation in the amplified cDNA most likely resulted from a T insertion in exon 49 of COL1A1. The frameshift resulted in a truncated pro alpha 1(I) carboxyl-terminal propeptide in which the amino acid sequence was abnormal from Val1146 to the carboxyl terminus. The propeptide lacked Asn1187, which normally carries an N-linked oligosaccharide unit, and was more basic than the normal propeptide. The distribution of cysteines was altered and the mutant propeptide was unable to form normal interchain disulfide bonds. Some of the mutant pro alpha 1(I)' chains were incorporated into type I procollagen molecules but resulted in abnormal helix formation with over-hydroxylation of lysine residues, increased degradation, and poor secretion. Only normal type I collagen was incorporated into the extracellular matrix in vivo resulting in a tissue type I collagen content approximately 20% of that of control (Bateman, J. F., Chan, D., Mascara, T., Rogers, J. G., and Cole, W. G. (1986) Biochem. J. 240, 699-708).  相似文献   

7.
S Aho  V Tate    H Boedtker 《Nucleic acids research》1984,12(15):6117-6125
During the fine structural analysis of the 5' end of the 38 kb chicken pro alpha 2(I) collagen gene, we failed to locate an exon, only 11 bp in size, which had been predicted from the DNA sequence analysis of a cDNA clone complementary to the 5' end of the pro alpha 2(I) collagen mRNA (1). We know report the location of this 11 bp exon, exon 2, at the 5' end of a 180 bp Pst I fragment, 1900 bp 3' to exon 1 and 600 bp 5' to exon 3. Its sequence, ATGTGAGTGAG, is highly unusual in that it contains two overlapping consensus donor splice sequences. Moreover, it is flanked by two overlapping donor splice sequences but only one of the four splice sequences is actually spliced (1). The first half of intron 1 also has an unusual sequence: it is 68% GC, contains 88 CpG dinucleotides and 11 Hpa II sites. The second half is more like other intron sequences in the collagen gene with a GC content of 41%, 19 CpG, and no Hpa II sites. However it contains two sequences with 7 and 9 bp homology to the 14 bp SV40 enhancer core sequence. It is suggested that some part of intron 1 may be involved in regulation.  相似文献   

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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   

10.
Complementary DNA and genomic DNA clones corresponding to the chicken alpha 1 (XI) collagen gene were isolated and characterized. These recombinant DNA clones covered 2667 base pairs of the mRNA and encode 624 amino acids of the triple helical region plus the entire carboxyl-terminal propeptide. Northern blot analysis showed a major band of approximately 6.5 kilobases and a minor band of approximately 7.5 kilobases. A combination of Northern blot and in situ hybridization analyses showed that, in addition to its presence in cartilage, this mRNA also is present in a wide variety of chicken noncartilaginous embryonic tissues including brain, heart, skeletal muscle, calvaria, and skin, but was not detected in liver. Type II collagen mRNA has also been detected at low levels in these same tissues. Also, similar to the mRNA for the alpha 1 chain for type II collagen, the alpha 1 (XI) collagen mRNA is detected in limb mesenchyme prior to condensation and differentiation of the core mesenchyme into cartilage.  相似文献   

11.
The development of the chick embryonic calvarium, an intramembranous bone, is characterized by direct differentiation of cranial ectomesenchymal cells into osteoblasts without the formation of a cartilage anlage. Collagen biosynthesis remains predominantly as type I in the calvaria. However, in severely calcium-deficient chick embryos maintained in shell-less (SL) culture, cartilage-specific type II collagen is synthesized by the calvaria. Immunohistochemistry localized the cells expressing type II collagen to undermineralized regions of the SL bone. In this study, collagen gene expression in bones of normal (N) and calcium-deficient SL chick embryos was examined at Incubation Day 14 by in situ cDNA-mRNA hybridization. A critical step in the procedure, which used biotinylated cDNA probes, was the selection of fixation conditions which maximized RNA retention and maintenance of tissue morphology. Tissues fixed in modified Carnoy's fixative (58% ethanol, 30% choloroform, 10% acetic acid, 2% formaldehyde) for 2-4 hr at -20 degrees C sectioned well and retained their cell morphology and cytoplasmic RNA. Other treatments important for the procedure included demineralization in 0.25 M HCl and removal of matrix by hyaluronidase digestion. In situ hybridization with type-specific collagen cDNA probes revealed that type II collagen mRNA was present in cells throughout the SL calvaria. More importantly, cells with type II collagen mRNA were also present in N calvaria which do not synthesize the protein. The overall abundance of type II-positive cells in N calvaria was not significantly different from that in SL calvaria, but their distribution throughout the bones differed. In general, the regional distribution of type II cells was inversely correlated with the extent of matrix mineralization. In the N calvaria, cells containing collagen type II mRNA were absent in the extensively mineralized superior zone, but were found in the temporal zone which showed limited mineralization. On the other hand, in the SL calvaria, which were substantially undermineralized overall, cells with type II mRNA were found throughout the tissue. Interestingly, the overall ratio of type I cells to type II cells was approximately 50% higher in N calvaria. These findings suggest that collagen type mRNA expression in the chick embryonic calvarium is correlated with, and perhaps dependent on, the extent of tissue matrix mineralization.  相似文献   

12.
A 1008 basepair (bp) cDNA clone encoding 335 amino acids followed by an inframe TGA translation termination codon and a 295-nucleotide 3' untranslated (UT) region has been isolated from a pig liver cDNA library. Based on the deduced amino acid and nucleotide sequence homology to a human cDNA (Kaumeyer, J.F., Polazzi, J.O. and Kotick, M.P. (1986) Nucleic Acids Res. 14, 7839-7850), the 5' amino terminus was found to code for alpha 1-microglobulin (alpha 1-M), a 183 amino acid protein belonging to the lipocalin protein superfamily (Pervaiz, S. and Brew, K. (1985) Science 228, 335-337). The 3' half encoded HI-30 which constitutes the Kunitz-type proteinase inhibitory (L-chain) domain of porcine inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor (I alpha TI). In Northern blot hybridization, this cDNA identified two equally abundant mRNA species of approx. 1.3 kb and 1.6 kb in length. However, a 125 bp cDNA probe derived from the 3' UT region of the cDNA hybridized only to the 1.6 kb mRNA. The differences observed in the 3' UT region of these mRNAs suggest the utilization of alternative polyadenylation signals or presence of unprocessed nuclear RNA. Densitometric scanning of Northern blots indicated that alpha 1-M/HI-30 mRNA levels were higher (5-8-fold) in fetal and neonatal liver compared to that of primiparous pigs. In contrast, the RNA levels did not change significantly during pregnancy. Dot blot analysis of RNA indicated liver to be the major site of alpha 1-M/HI-30 mRNA expression with lower levels observed in the stomach. The results suggest that modulation of alpha 1-M/HI-30 gene expression could play a role during porcine growth. Increased I alpha TI L-chain mRNA levels may be particularly important in fetal and neonatal development when regulation of the inflammatory response and protection of macromolecules from proteolytic degradation is vital to survival and sustained growth.  相似文献   

13.
We have isolated three overlapping cDNA clones encoding the pro alpha 2(XI) collagen chain from a human chondrocyte cDNA library. Together, the cDNAs code for 257 uninterrupted Gly-X-Y triplets (almost 80% of the triple helical domain) and about 200 amino acid residues of the carboxyl telopeptide and carboxyl propeptide. The identification of the clones as pro alpha 2(XI) cDNAs was based on the complete identity between the amino acid sequences of three tryptic peptides derived from human alpha 2(XI) collagen and the cDNA-derived sequence. We have also sequenced six exons within a human genomic alpha 2(XI) cosmid clone. This sequence shows that although type XI collagen belongs to the fibril-forming class of collagens, there are substantial differences in exon sizes at the 3' end of the gene when comparing the alpha 2(XI) gene with those of human types I, II, and III collagens. Finally, pro alpha 2(XI) cDNA has been used as a probe to determine the location of the gene by in situ hybridization of chromosome spreads. The results demonstrate that the gene is located close to the region p212 on chromosome 6. Northern blot analysis shows that the gene is expressed in cartilage but not in adult liver, skin, and tendon.  相似文献   

14.
Our previous work demonstrated that the inhibition of type I collagen synthesis by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25-(OH)2D3) in fetal rat calvaria and cultured rat osteosarcoma cells is accompanied by equivalent reduction in steady state levels of alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) collagen mRNA. To pursue the mechanism for this effect, we isolated and sequenced a 3.6-kilobase DNA fragment that contained the promoter for the rat alpha 1(I) collagen gene. This promoter fragment was fused to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene and was introduced into ROS 17/2.8 cells by calcium phosphate co-precipitation. Expression of this construct was diminished by 1,25-(OH)2D3 to the same degree as the endogenous collagen gene in both transient expression assays and in permanently selected bone cells. However, a fibroblast cell line did not show a similar reduction in the activity of the transgene or the endogenous collagen gene. These experiments indicate that the alpha 1(I) promoter contains cis-active elements which are regulated by the 1,25-(OH)2D3 receptor in ROS 17/2.8 cells.  相似文献   

15.
We have isolated a partial cDNA for alpha 1(XI) collagen from a bovine smooth muscle cell (SMC) library. Previously, this collagen was not known to be expressed in SMCs. Comparison of the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequence of the 2.7-kilobase bovine clone and the human alpha 1(XI) sequence indicates 92 and 98% homology, respectively. Bovine SMCs in culture were found to produce alpha 1(XI) mRNA. However, alpha 2(XI) and alpha 1(II) collagen RNA were not detectable; therefore, SMCs cannot synthesize the same type XI collagen as found in cartilage. Since type XI collagen is structurally related to type V collagen, the expression of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen mRNA in SMCs was characterized. Levels of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen mRNAs were low in exponentially growing SMCs and increased 3-4-fold as cells became confluent. Increased mRNA levels were also observed when exponentially growing subconfluent SMCs were incubated in medium containing 0.5% fetal bovine serum for 24 h, similar to the effects of serum deprivation on the expression of types I and III collagen genes (Kindy, M. S., Chang, C.-J., and Sonenshein, G. E. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 11426-11430). However, as cell density increased, serum deprivation resulted in very different responses for these collagen genes. Serum deprivation caused a decrease in expression of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen mRNAs in cultures as they approached confluence. In contrast, at confluence alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) mRNA levels no longer responded to serum concentration whereas expression of alpha 1(III) mRNA remained inducible by serum deprivation. These results suggest concerted regulation of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen gene expression, which is distinct from that for the chains of type I and type III collagen with respect to cell density and serum.  相似文献   

16.
Screening of two rat liver cDNA libraries, one of which was constructed using an alpha 1-inhibitor 3 (alpha 1-13) specific primer, yielded overlapping cDNA clones which correspond to the full length cDNA for alpha 1-13 mRNA. On the basis of sequence microheterogeneity existing throughout the cDNA sequence we identified two alpha 1-13 mRNA species whose sequences are so grossly different in their bait regions that the amino acid homology therein is only 30%. Using oligonucleotide probes derived from their respective bait regions we investigated the regulation of the two alpha 1 I3 mRNA species and demonstrated that only one of them, alpha 1-I3 variant I, is regulated pretranslationally following experimentally induced inflammation.  相似文献   

17.
The nucleotide sequence for alpha alpha enolase (non-neuronal enolase: NNE) of rat brain and liver was determined from recombinant cDNA clones. The sequence was composed of 1722 bp which included the 1299 bp of the complete coding region, the 108 bp of the 5'-noncoding region and the 312 bp of the 3'-noncoding region containing a polyadenylation signal. In addition, the poly(A) tail was also found. A potential ribosome-binding site was located 30 nucleotides upstream to the initiation codon in the 5'-noncoding region. The amino acid sequence deduced from the nucleotide sequence was 433 amino acids in length and showed very high homology (82%) to the amino acid sequence of gamma gamma enolase (neuron-specific enolase: NSE), although the nucleotide sequence showed slightly lower homology (75%). The size of NNE mRNA was approximately 1800 bases by Northern transfer analysis and much shorter than that of NSE mRNA (2400 bases) indicating a short 3'-noncoding region. A dot-blot hybridization and Northern transfer analysis of cytoplasmic RNA from the developing rat brains using a labeled 3'-noncoding region of cDNA (no homology between NSE and NNE) showed a decrease of NNE mRNA at around 10 postnatal days and then a gradual increase to adult age without changes of mRNA size. Liver mRNA did not show any significant change during development.  相似文献   

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Paraffin sections of human skeletal tissues were studied in order to identify cells responsible for production of types I, II, and III collagens by in situ hybridization. Northern hybridization and sequence information were used to select restriction fragments of cDNA clones for the corresponding mRNAs to obtain probes with a minimum of cross-hybridization. The specificity of the probes was proven in hybridizations to sections of developing fingers: osteoblasts and chondrocytes, known to produce only one type of fibrillar collagen each (I and II, respectively) were only recognized by the corresponding cDNA probes. Smooth connective tissues exhibited variable hybridization intensities with types I and III collagen cDNA probes. The technique was used to localize the activity of type II collagen production in the different zones of cartilage during the growth of long bones. Visual inspection and grain counting revealed the highest levels of pro alpha 1(II) collagen mRNAs in chondrocytes of the lower proliferative and upper hypertrophic zones of the growth plate cartilage. This finding was confirmed by Northern blotting of RNAs isolated from epiphyseal (resting) cartilage and from growth zone cartilage. Analysis of the osseochondral junction revealed virtually no overlap between hybridization patterns obtained with probes specific for type I and type II collagen mRNAs. Only a fraction of the chondrocytes in the degenerative zone were recognized by the pro alpha 1(II) collagen cDNA probe, and none by the type I collagen cDNA probe. In the mineralizing zone virtually all cells were recognized by the type I collagen cDNA probe, but only very few scattered cells appeared to contain type II collagen mRNA. These data indicate that in situ hybridization is a valuable tool for identification of connective tissue cells which are actively producing different types of collagens at the various stages of development, differentiation, and growth.  相似文献   

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