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1.
Two substitutions for glycine in the triple-helical domain were found in type I procollagen synthesized by skin fibroblasts from two probands with lethal osteogenesis imperfecta. One was a substitution of valine for glycine alpha 1-637, and the other was a substitution of arginine for glycine alpha 2-694. The effects of the mutations on the zipper-like folding of the collagen triple helix were similar, since there was post-translational overmodification of the collagenase A fragments (amino acids 1-775) but not of more COOH-terminal fragments of the protein. The mutations differed markedly, however, on their effects on thermal unfolding of the triple helix. The collagenase A fragment from the collagen containing the arginine alpha 2-694 substitution was cleaved at about amino acid 700 when incubated with trypsin at 30-35 degrees C. Therefore, there was micro-unfolding of the triple helix at a site close to the glycine substitution. Surprisingly, however, the collagenase A fragment with the valine alpha 1-637 substitution was also cleaved at about amino acid 700 under the same conditions. The results, therefore, demonstrated that although most glycine substitutions delay folding of the triple helix in regions that are NH2-terminal to the site of the substitution, the effects on unfolding can be transmitted to regions that are COOH-terminal to the site of the glycine substitution.  相似文献   

2.
Skin fibroblasts from a proband with a lethal variant of osteogenesis imperfecta synthesized both apparently normal type I procollagen and a type I procollagen that had slow electrophoretic mobility because of posttranslational overmodifications. The thermal unfolding of the collagen molecules as assayed by protease digestion was about 2 degrees C lower than normal. It is surprising, however, that collagenase A and B fragments showed an essentially normal melting profile. Assay of cDNA heteroduplexes with a new technique involving carbodiimide modification indicated a mutation at about the codon for amino acid 550 of the alpha 1(I) chain. Subsequent amplification of the cDNA by the PCR and nucleotide sequencing revealed a single-base mutation that substituted an aspartate codon for glycine at position alpha 1-541 in the COL1A1 gene. The results here confirm previous indications that the effects of glycine substitutions in type I procollagen are highly position specific. They also demonstrate that a recently described technique for detecting single-base differences by carbodiimide modification of DNA heteroduplexes can be effectively employed to locate mutations in large genes.  相似文献   

3.
Affected individuals from two apparently distinct, mild osteogenesis imperfecta families were heterozygous for a G to T transition in the COL1A2 gene that resulted in cysteine for glycine substitutions at position 646 in the alpha 2(I) chain of type I collagen. A child with a moderately severe form of osteogenesis imperfecta was heterozygous for a G to T transition that resulted in a substitution of cysteine for glycine at position 259 in the COL1A2 gene. Type I collagen molecules containing an alpha 2(I) chain with cysteine at position 259 denaturated at a lower temperature than molecules containing an alpha 2(I) chain with cysteine at position 646. In contrast to cysteine for glycine substitutions in the alpha 1(I) chain, the severity of the osteogenesis imperfecta phenotype is not directly proportional to the distance of the mutation from the amino-terminal end of the triple helix. These findings could be explained if the type I collagen triple helix contains discontinuous domains that differ in their contributions to maintaining helix stability.  相似文献   

4.
Synthesis of type I procollagen was examined in fibroblasts from a proband with a lethal perinatal variant of osteogenesis imperfecta. After trypsin digestion of the type I procollagen, a portion of the alpha 1 (I) chains was recovered as disulfide-linked dimers. Digestion of the protein with vertebrate collagenase and mapping of cyanogen bromide peptides suggested that a new cysteine residue was present between residues 551 and 775 of the alpha 1 (I) chain. Sequencing of cloned cDNAs prepared using mRNA from the proband's fibroblasts demonstrated that some of the clones contained a single base mutation that converted the glycine codon in amino acid position 748 of the alpha 1 (I) chain to a cysteine codon. About 80% of the type I procollagen synthesized by the proband's fibroblasts had a decreased thermal stability. The results, therefore, were consistent with the conclusion that normal pro-alpha 1 (I) chains and pro-alpha 1 (I) chains containing a cysteine residue in the alpha chain domain were synthesized in about equal amounts and incorporated randomly into type I procollagen. However, only about 10% of the alpha 1 (I) chains generated by trypsin digestion were disulfide-linked. Further studies demonstrated a decreased rate of secretion of type I procollagen containing the new cysteine residue and decreased processing of the protein by procollagen N-proteinase in cultures of postconfluent fibroblasts. Both parents were phenotypically normal and their fibroblasts synthesized only normal type I procollagen. Therefore, the mutation in the proband was a sporadic one and is very likely to have caused the connective tissue fragility that produced the lethal phenotype.  相似文献   

5.
Type I procollagen was examined in cultured skin fibroblasts from a patient with a lethal variant of osteogenesis imperfecta. About half of the pro-alpha chains were post-translationally overmodified and had a decreased thermal stability. The vertebrate collagenase A fragment had a normal thermal stability, but the B fragment had a decreased thermal stability. Therefore, there was a change in primary structure in amino acids 776-1014 of either the alpha 1(I) or alpha 2(I) chain. Three of five cDNA clones for the alpha 2(I) chain contained a single-base substitution of an A for a G that converted the codon for glycine at amino acid position 907 to aspartate. Complete nucleotide sequencing of bases coding for amino acids 776 to 1014 of the alpha 2(I) chain was carried out in one cDNA clone that contained the mutation in the glycine codon and in one that did not. Also, nucleotide sequencing was performed of bases coding for amino acids 776-1014 of the alpha 1(I) chain in seven independent cDNA clones. No other mutations were found. Therefore, the single base substitution that converts glycine 907 in the alpha 2(I) chain to aspartate is solely responsible for the decreased thermal stability of the type I procollagen synthesized by the proband's fibroblasts. Also, glycine 907 of the alpha 2(I) chain is an important component of a cooperative block that determines the melting temperature of the whole molecule.  相似文献   

6.
Previous observations (Stolle, C.A., Pyeritz, R.E., Myers, J.C., and Prockop, D.J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 1937-1944) indicated that fibroblasts from a proband with dominantly inherited Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV synthesized type III procollagen with a structural defect near the collagenase cleavage site at amino acid 781 and near the trypsin-sensitive site at 789. The type III procollagen was unusually sensitive to proteinases and cleaved by trypsin into a three-quarter fragment at 0 degrees C. Here we demonstrate that the mutation in the type III procollagen gene is a single base mutation that converts the codon for glycine at amino acid 790 of the alpha 1(III) chain to a codon for serine. The mutation probably makes the procollagen molecule unusually sensitive to proteases because it causes local unfolding of the triple helix and exposes the adjacent arginine residue. The results provide the first indication that not all glycine substitutions in the triple helices of fibrillar collagens are equivalent in terms of their effects of the biological function of the molecule.  相似文献   

7.
Previous studies demonstrated that the thermal stability of the procollagen triple helix can be assayed by digesting the protein for short periods with high concentrations of trypsin and chymotrypsin. Here we cleaved human type I procollagen or collagen with vertebrate collagenase to generate A fragments from the three-quarter amino termini and B fragments from the one-quarter carboxy termini of the molecules. The thermal stabilities of the fragments were then assayed by rapid trypsin/chymotrypsin digestion. Both fragments were resistant up to 36 degrees C and completely degraded between 37 degrees C and 39 degrees C. In subsequent experiments the same assay was carried out with type I procollagens synthesized by fibroblasts from two patients with lethal variants of osteogenesis imperfecta. With one, the A fragments were selectively destabilized, an observation consistent with previous data indicating that the mutation in the patient produced a deletion of 84 amino acids from the middle of the alpha 1(I) chain. With procollagen synthesized by fibroblasts from the second patient the B fragments were selectively destabilized, an observation consistent with preliminary data indicating a mutation that alters the primary structure of the carboxy-terminal region of the alpha 1(I) chain. Therefore, the procedures described here present a simple and direct method for locating mutations that destabilize the collagen triple helix.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated one member of a family with dominant osteogenesis imperfecta type IV through three generations. In protein-chemical studies of cultured fibroblasts derived from the proband, collagen I was overmodified, with normal processing of procollagen 1, normal thermal stability, and a cyanogen bromide peptide map that suggested a C-terminal location of the structural abnormality in the collagen triple helix. Sequencing of the gene encoding the 2(I) chain of collagen I (COL1A2) indicated a nine base-pair deletion of nucleotides 3418–3426. When a polymerase chain reaction product containing the nucleotides in question was electrophoresed in a 12% polyacrylamide gel, two bands with a difference in size of nine base pairs could be shown. Sequencing of the lower molecular weight band confirmed the deletion of the nine base pairs involving codons 1003–1006 of COL1A2. The deletion introduced aSfiI restriction site that was used for confirmation of the deletion in genomic DNA from the proband. The deletion resulted in the removal of three amino acids (Gly-Pro-Pro), but this did not disrupt the Gly-X-Y sequence of the collagen triple helix, as is often the case in the more common glycine substitutions. We discuss the ways in which this deletion could result in osteogenesis imperfecta.  相似文献   

9.
Previous observations with type I collagen from a proband with lethal osteogenesis imperfecta demonstrated that type I collagen containing a substitution of cysteine for glycine alpha 1-748 copolymerized with normal type I collagen (Kadler, K. E., Torre-Blanco, A., Adachi, E., Vogel, B. E., Hojima, Y., and Prockop, D. J. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 5081-5088). Here, three preparations containing normal type I procollagen and type I procollagen with a substitution of cysteine for glycine alpha 1-175, glycine alpha 1-691, or glycine alpha 1-988 were purified from cultured skin fibroblasts from probands with osteogenesis imperfecta. The procollagens were then used as substrates in a system for assaying the self-assembly of type I collagen into fibrils. The cysteine-substituted collagens in all three preparations were incorporated into fibrils. The cysteine alpha 1-175 and cysteine alpha 1-691 collagens were shown to increase the lag time and decrease the propagation rate constant for fibril assembly. All three preparations containing cysteine-substituted collagens formed fibrils with diameters that were two to four times the diameter of fibrils formed under the same conditions by normal type I collagen. Also, the three preparations containing cysteine substituted collagens had higher solubilities than normal type I collagen. The results, therefore, demonstrated that the three cysteine-substituted collagens copolymerized with normal type I collagen. The effects of the mutated collagens on fibril assembly can be understood in terms of a recently proposed model of fibril growth from symmetrical tips by assuming that the mutated monomers partially inhibit tip growth but not lateral growth of the fibrils. Of special interest was the observation that the Cys alpha 1-175 collagen from a proband with a non-lethal variant of osteogenesis imperfecta had quantitatively less effect on several parameters of fibril assembly at 37 degrees C than cysteine-substituted collagens from three probands with lethal variants of the disease.  相似文献   

10.
Dermal fibroblasts from a fetus with perinatal lethal osteogenesis imperfecta synthesized normal and abnormal type I procollagen molecules. The abnormal molecules contained one or two pro alpha 1(I) chains in which glycine, alanine, and hydroxyproline at positions 874, 875, and 876 in the triple-helical region were deleted as the result of a 9-base pair genomic deletion. Molecules that contained abnormal chains were overmodified from the site of the deletion toward the amino-terminal region of the molecule. Secretion of the overmodified molecules was impaired. The thermal stability of molecules containing abnormal chains was lower than that of normally modified molecules. After cleavage of molecules with vertebrate collagenase, the temperature of thermal denaturation of the overmodified A fragments was greater than that of the fragments from the normal molecules. The rates of cleavage of the normal and the abnormal molecules by N-proteinase were indistinguishable. Our findings suggest that the tripeptide deletion introduces a shift in the phase of the chains in the triple helix. This structural change is propagated from the site of the deletion toward the amino terminus of the molecule, but the subsequent alteration in the structure of the N-proteinase cleavage site is not sufficient to cause a decrease in the rate of cleavage by the enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Cultured dermal fibroblasts from an infant with the lethal perinatal form of osteogenesis imperfecta (type II) synthesize normal and abnormal forms of type I procollagen. The abnormal type I procollagen molecules are excessively modified during their intracellular stay, have a lower than normal melting transition temperature, are secreted at a reduced rate, and form abnormally thin collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix in vitro. Overmodification of the abnormal type I procollagen molecules was limited to the NH2-terminal three-fourths of the triple helical domain. Two-dimensional mapping of modified and unmodified alpha chains of type I collagen demonstrated neither charge alterations nor large insertions or deletions in the region of alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) in which overmodification begins. Both the structure and function of type I procollagen synthesized by cells from the parents of this infant were normal. The simplest interpretation of the results of this study is that the osteogenesis imperfecta phenotype arose from a new dominant mutation in one of the genes encoding the chains of type I procollagen. Given the requirement for glycine in every third position of the triple helical domain, the mutation may represent a single amino acid substitution for a glycine residue. These findings demonstrate further heterogeneity in the biochemical basis of osteogenesis imperfecta type II and suggest that the nature and location of mutations in type I procollagen may determine phenotypic variation.  相似文献   

12.
A proband with lethal osteogenesis imperfecta has been investigated for the causative defect at the levels of collagen protein, mRNA, and DNA. Analysis of type I collagen synthesized by the proband's fibroblasts showed excessive post-translational modification of alpha 1(I) chains along the entire length of the helix. Oververmodification of alpha chains could be prevented by incubation of the cells at 30 rather than 37 degrees C, and the thermal stability of the triple helix, as determined by protease digestion, was normal. RNase A cleavage of RNA:RNA hybrids formed between the proband's mRNA and antisense RNA derived from normal pro-alpha 1(I) chain cDNA clones was used to locate an abnormality to exon 43 of the proband's pro-alpha 1(I) collagen gene (COL1A1). The nucleotide sequence of the corresponding gene region showed, in one allele, the deletion of 9 base pairs, not present in either parent, within a repeating sequence of exon 43. The mutation causes the loss of one of three consecutive Gly-Ala-Pro triplets at positions 868-876, but does not otherwise disrupt the Gly-X-Y sequence. Procollagen processing in fibroblast cultures and susceptibility of the mutant collagen I to cleavage with vertebrate collagenase were normal, indicating that the slippage of collagen chains by one Gly-X-Y triplet does not abolish amino-propeptidase and collagenase cleavage sites. How the mutation produces the lethal osteogenesis imperfecta phenotype is not entirely clear; the data suggest that the interaction of alpha chains immediately prior to helix formation may be affected.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
We investigated regions of different helical stability within human type I collagen and discussed their role in intermolecular interactions and osteogenesis imperfecta (OI). By differential scanning calorimetry and circular dichroism, we measured and mapped changes in the collagen melting temperature (DeltaTm) for 41 different Gly substitutions from 47 OI patients. In contrast to peptides, we found no correlations of DeltaTm with the identity of the substituting residue. Instead, we observed regular variations in DeltaTm with the substitution location in different triple helix regions. To relate the DeltaTm map to peptide-based stability predictions, we extracted the activation energy of local helix unfolding (DeltaG) from the reported peptide data. We constructed the DeltaG map and tested it by measuring the H-D exchange rate for glycine NH residues involved in interchain hydrogen bonds. Based on the DeltaTm and DeltaG maps, we delineated regional variations in the collagen triple helix stability. Two large, flexible regions deduced from the DeltaTm map aligned with the regions important for collagen fibril assembly and ligand binding. One of these regions also aligned with a lethal region for Gly substitutions in the alpha1(I) chain.  相似文献   

15.
Experiments were carried out to test the hypothesis that a 19-year-old proband with a mild variant of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV had a mutation in the gene for type III procollagen. cDNA and genomic DNA were analyzed by using the polymerase chain reaction and cloning of the products into M13 filamentous phage. A mutation was found that converted the codon for glycine 883 of the triple-helical domain in one allele for type III procollagen to a codon for aspartate. The polymerase chain reaction introduced a few artifactual single base substitutions. Also, it was difficult to distinguish copies from the two alleles in many of the M13 clones. Therefore, several different strategies and analyses of about 50,000 nucleotide sequences in a series of clones were used to demonstrate that the mutation in the codon for glycine 883 was the only mutation in coding sequences for the triple-helical domain of type III procollagen that could have contributed to the phenotype. The same mutation in the codon for glycine 883 in one allele for type III procollagen was found in the proband's 52-year-old father who also had a mild variant of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV. The type III procollagen synthesized by the proband's fibroblasts was analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Less type III procollagen was secreted by the proband's fibroblasts than by control fibroblasts. Also, the thermal stability of the type III procollagen synthesized by the proband's fibroblasts was lower than the thermal stability of normal type III procollagen as assayed by brief protease digestion. The results, therefore, demonstrated that the single base mutation that converted the codon of glycine 883 to a codon for aspartate destabilized the entire triple helix of type III procollagen and probably accounted for the mild phenotype of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV seen in the proband and her father.  相似文献   

16.
The majority of collagen mutations causing osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) are glycine substitutions that disrupt formation of the triple helix. A rare type of collagen mutation consists of a duplication or deletion of one or two Gly-X-Y triplets. These mutations shift the register of collagen chains with respect to each other in the helix but do not interrupt the triplet sequence, yet they have severe clinical consequences. We investigated the effect of shifting the register of the collagen helix by a single Gly-X-Y triplet on collagen assembly, stability, and incorporation into fibrils and matrix. These studies utilized a triplet duplication in COL1A1 exon 44 that occurred in the cDNA and gDNA of two siblings with lethal OI. The normal allele encodes three identical Gly-Ala-Hyp triplets at aa 868-876, whereas the mutant allele encodes four. The register shift delays helix formation, causing overmodification. Differential scanning calorimetry yielded a decrease in T(m) of 2 degrees C for helices with one mutant chain and a 6 degrees C decrease in helices with two mutant chains. An in vitro binary co-processing assay of N-proteinase cleavage demonstrated that procollagen with the triplet duplication has slower N-propeptide cleavage than in normal controls or procollagen with proalpha1(I) G832S, G898S, or G997S substitutions, showing that the register shift persists through the entire helix. The register shift disrupts incorporation of mutant collagen into fibrils and matrix. Proband fibrils formed inefficiently in vitro and contained only normal helices and helices with a single mutant chain. Helices with two mutant chains and a significant portion of helices with one mutant chain did not form fibrils. In matrix deposited by proband fibroblasts, mutant chains were abundant in the immaturely cross-linked fraction but constituted a minor fraction of maturely cross-linked chains. The profound effects of shifting the collagen triplet register on chain interactions in the helix and on fibril formation correlate with the severe clinical consequences.  相似文献   

17.
Type I procollagen was purified from the medium of dermal fibroblasts cultured from four individuals with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) type II who had mutations in the COL1A1 gene of type I procollagen. The procollagens were mixtures of normal molecules and molecules that contained substitutions of aspartate for glycine 97, arginine for glycine 550, cysteine for glycine 718, and aspartate for glycine 883 in one or both of the alpha 1 (I) chains of the molecule. The procollagens were cleaved more slowly than control type I procollagen by procollagen N-proteinase. Double-reciprocal plots of initial relative velocities and initial substrate concentrations indicated that the OI procollagens were all cleaved slowly by N-proteinase because of decreased Vmax, rather than increased Km. This suggested that slow cleavage of the OI procollagens by N-proteinase was the result of slow conversion of the N-proteinase-procollagen complex. Further experiments showed that the vertebrate collagenase A fragment of the aspartate for glycine alpha 1(I) 883 OI procollagen that contained the N-proteinase cleavage site but not the site of the substitution was also cleaved more slowly by N-proteinase than the normal vertebrate collagenase A fragments in the samples. These data show, for the first time, that an altered triple-helical structure is propagated from the site of a substitution of a bulky residue for glycine to the amino-terminal end of the procollagen molecule and disrupts the conformation of the N-proteinase cleavage site. Rotary shadowing electron microscopy of molecules in the preparation of cysteine for glycine alpha 1(I)-718 showed the presence of a kink in approximately 5% of a population of molecules in which 60% were abnormal and 20% contained a disulfide bond. In contrast, procollagens containing aspartate and arginine for glycine were indistinguishable by rotary shadowing electron microscopy from those in control samples. The results here confirm previous suggestions that substitution of cysteine for glycine in the alpha 1(I) chain of type I collagen can introduce a kink near the site of the substitution. However, the presence of a kink is not a prerequisite for delayed cleavage of abnormal procollagens by N-proteinase.  相似文献   

18.
Mutations in collagen genes: causes of rare and some common diseases in humans   总被引:48,自引:0,他引:48  
More than 70 mutations in the two structural genes for type I procollagen (COL1A1 and COL1A2) have been found in probands with osteogenesis imperfecta, a heritable disease of children characterized by fragility of bone and other tissues rich in type I collagen. The mutations include deletions, insertions, RNA splicing mutations, and single-base substitutions that convert a codon for glycine to a codon for an amino acid with a bulkier side chain. With a few exceptions, the most severe phenotypes of the disease are explained largely by synthesis of structurally defective pro alpha chains of type I procollagen that either interfere with the folding of the triple helix or with self-assembly of collagen into fibrils. The results emphasize the extent to which the zipperlike folding of the collagen triple helix and the self-assembly of collagen fibrils depend on the principle of nucleated growth whereby a few subunits form a nucleus and the nucleus is then propagated to generate a large structure with a precisely defined architecture. The principle of nucleated growth is a highly efficient mechanism for the assembly of large structures, but biological systems that depend extensively on nucleated growth are highly vulnerable to mutations that cause synthesis of structurally abnormal but partially functional subunits. Recently, several mutations in three other collagen genes (COL2A1, COL3A1, and COL4A5) have been found in probands with genetic diseases involving tissues rich in these collagens. Most of the probands have rare genetic diseases but a few appear to have phenotypes that are difficult to distinguish from more common disorders such as osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, and aortic aneurysms. Therefore, the results suggest that mutations in procollagen genes may cause a wide spectrum of both rare and common human diseases.  相似文献   

19.
We characterized a de novo 4.5 kilobase pair deletion in the paternally derived alpha 2(I) collagen allele (COL1A2) from a patient with perinatal lethal osteogenesis imperfecta. The intron-to-intron deletion removed the seven exons which encode residues 586-765 of the triple helical domain of the chain. Type I procollagen molecules that contain the mutant pro-alpha 2(I) chain have a lower than normal thermal stability, undergo increased post-translational modification amino-terminal to the deletion junction, and are retained within the rough endoplasmic reticulum. The block to secretion appears to result from improper assembly of the triple helix, apparently a consequence of a disruption of charge-charge interactions between the shortened pro-alpha 2(I) chain and normal pro-alpha 1(I) chains. The lethal effect may be due to decreased secretion of normal collagen and secretion of a small amount of abnormal collagen that disrupts matrix formation.  相似文献   

20.
We have identified a point mutation in one alpha 1(I) collagen allele (COL1A1) of a child with the type IV osteogenesis imperfecta phenotype. When compared to parental and control samples, skin fibroblasts of the proband synthesized two populations of type I collagen molecules. One population was normal; the other was delayed in secretion and electrophoretic migration due to post-translational overmodification. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of the CNBr peptides demonstrated a gradient of overmodification beginning near the carboxyl-terminal CB peptides. This predicts that the mutation delaying helix formation is near the carboxyl-terminal end of one of the component chains of type I collagen. The mRNA of the patient was probed with overlapping antisense riboprobes to type I collagen cDNA. Cleavage of a mismatch in RNA/RNA hybrids of RNase A allowed the location of the mutation to a 225-base pair region of alpha 1(I) cDNA. The mismatch was not present in RNA/RNA hybrids from either parent. This region of both alpha 1(I) alleles of the patient was isolated by screening a lambda ZAP cDNA library. Sequence determination of both alleles demonstrated a single nucleotide change, G----A, resulting in the substitution of a serine for a glycine at amino acid residue 832. This point mutation occurs in the coding region for alpha 1(I) CB6 and is concordant with the protein data. The finding of a glycine substitution in an alpha 1(I) chain of a patient with the milder type IV osteogenesis imperfecta phenotype requires modification of current molecular models for types II and IV osteogenesis imperfecta.  相似文献   

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