首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
A method is described whereby the ratio of the major interstitial collagens (Types I and III) can be measured in biopsy specimens of human tissue weighing as little as 25 mg. Marker peptides are solubilized from the tissue by digestion with cyanogen bromide. These peptides which are not known to be involved in collagen crosslinking are isolated and quantified by a combination of carboxymethyl-cellulose chromatography and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The peptides used are α1(I)-CB7 and α1(III)-CB5. The use of the method is illustrated by analyzing the collagen type ratio in small specimens of tendon, aorta, and vena cava.  相似文献   

2.
J M Seyer  A H Kang 《Biochemistry》1977,16(6):1158-1164
Human liver type III collagen was prepared by limited pepsin digestion, differential salt precipitation, and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. Cyanogen bromide digestion of purified type III collagen chains yielded nine distinct peptides. Three peptides, alpha1(III)-CB3, alpha1(III)-CB7, and alpha1(III)-CB6, were isolated by carboxymethylcellulose chromatography and Sephadex G-50 SF gel filtration. Automated Edman degradation together with selective hydroxylamine cleavage and chymotrypsin and trypsin digestion enabled determination of their complete amino acid sequence. Compared with type I collagen, the data show tentative homology of alpha1(III)-CB3 with alpha1(I)-CB1, alpha1(I)-CB2, and alpha1(I)-CB4; alpha1(III)-CB7 with alpha1(I)-CB5; and alpha1(III)-CB6 with the amino-terminal portion of alpha1(I)-CB8. Close interspecies homology was found between the sequences presented here with 90 residues of alpha1(III)-CB3 and 26 of alpha1(III)-CB8 of calf aorta. The present study establishes the amino acid sequence of 229 residues near the amino terminus or nearly one-quarter of the type III collagen chains. The disaccharide, Glc-Gal, was convalently bound to hydroxylysine at a position corresponding to the same location in the alpha1(I) chain.  相似文献   

3.
Bovine articular type II collagen was prepared by limited pepsin digestion, differential salt fractionation and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. Cyanogen bromide digestion of purified type II collagen alpha chains yielded twelve distinct peptides designated CB1-12. The peptide alpha 1(II)-CB11 was isolated by carboxymethylcellulose chromatography and Sephadex G-75S gel filtration. Automated Edman degradation together with chymotrypsin, thermolysin and trypsin digestion enabled identification of its complete amino acid sequence. Compared with type I and type III collagen, the data show similarity with alpha 1(I)-CB8 and alpha 1(III)-CB6-1-8-10-2 peptides, respectively. The peptide is located within residues 124-402 of the alpha 1(II) collagen chain and with its identification, now extends the known amino acid sequence of bovine type II cartilage collagen to 660 amino acid residues including alpha 1(II)-CB1-2-6-12-11-8-10 (partial). This corresponds to alpha 1(I)-CB0-1-2-4-5-8-3-7 (partial; 1-660) and alpha 1(III)-CB3A-3B-3C-7-6-1-8-10-2-4-5 (partial; 1-660) of bovine alpha 1(I) and alpha 1(III) collagen chains.  相似文献   

4.
J M Seyer  C Mainardi  A H Kang 《Biochemistry》1980,19(8):1583-1589
Type III collagen was prepared from human liver by limited pepsin digestion, differential salt precipitation, and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. Ten distinct peptides were obtained by cyanogen bromide digestion. The peptide alpha 1 (III)-CB5 was further purified by carboxymethylcellulose chromatography, and its amino acid sequence was determined. Automatic Edman degradation of intact alpha 1 (III)-CB5, tryptic and thermolytic peptides, and hydroxylamine-derived fragments was used to establish the total sequence. The mammalian collagenase site contained in the alpha 1 (III)-CB5 sequence was ascertained by digestion of native type III collagen with purified rheumatoid synovial collagenase. Collagenase cleavage occurred at a single Gly--Ile bond, one triplet before the corresponding specific cleavage site of type I collagen. The present work brings the known sequence of human liver type III collagen to include alpha 1 (III)-CB3-7-6-1-8-10-2-4-5. These correspond to the homologous region of alpha 1 (I)-CB0-1-2-4-5-8-3-7 residues 11--804.  相似文献   

5.
A procedure for the quantitation of types I and III collagens by cyanogen bromide peptide analysis was developed with the aim of eliminating certain problems associated with this method. Ion-exchange chromatography reduced high background levels on gel scans used to quantitate the peptides; reduction with beta-mercaptoethanol substantially increased the efficiency of the cyanogen bromide cleavage; use of a concave gradient in acrylamide from 8 to 20% improved the resolution of cyanogen bromide peptides separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; and a normalization procedure eliminated variations due to differences in the amount of material loaded on the gel system. This method of quantitation was applied to human aorta samples and to collagen secreted by human skin fibroblasts. Metachromasy of type I and type III collagen cyanogen bromide peptides stained with Coomassie blue R-250 was established and this was used as an index of the purity of the cyanogen bromide peptide preparations. Type I and III collagens were prepared from human placental tissue, and these purified collagens were used to construct calibration curves to determine the relationship between the quantity of diagnostic cyanogen bromide peptides present and the composition of the sample in terms of types I and III collagens.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
J M Seyer  A H Kang 《Biochemistry》1978,17(16):3404-3411
Type III collagen was solubilized from human liver by limited pepsin digestion and purified by differential salt precipitation and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. Digestion with cyanogen bromide yielded the nine distinct peptides previously described and an additional tripeptide not recognized in earlier studies. Five of these peptides, alpha1 (III)-CB1, 2, 4, 8, and 10, were further purified by molecular sieve and/or ion exchange chromatography. They contained 12, 40, 149, 125 and 3 amino acid residues, respectively. The amino acid sequence of these peptides was determined by automated Edman degradation of tryptic (before and after maleylation), chymotryptic, thermolytic or hydroxylamine-derived peptide fragments as well as the intact peptides. The alignment of these five peptides within the collagen chain is deduced to be 1-8-10-2-4 by homology with known alpha1 (I) sequences. The known CNBr peptide alignment of the NH2-terminal portion of type III collagen so far would, therefore, be alpha1 (III)-CB3-7-6-1-8-10-2-4 and correspond to the homologous region of alpha1 (I)-CB0-1-2-4-5-8-3 or residues 11-567 of the alpha1 (III) collagen chain.  相似文献   

9.
Two cyanogen bromide fragments (alpha 1-CB7 and alpha 1-CB8) of bovine corneal stromal collagen have been isolated and characterized. These added to those characterized in our previous work account for 95% of the amino acid sequence of the alpha 1(1)-chain. The hydroxylysine glycoside content of each fragment was determined and in this way the general distribution of glycoside over the entire molecule was deduced accounting for all the galactosylhydroxylysine and most of the glucosylgalactosylhydroxylysine of this heavily glycosylated type I collagen. The characterization of fragments alpha 1-CB7 and alpha 1-CB8 has enabled us to resolve the controversy over the relative mobilities of these fragments on SDS gels. Fragment alpha 1-CB7 of bovine corneal collagen was digested by trypsin and by staphylococcal proteinase V8. The resultant peptides were isolated by gel and ion-exchange chromatography and identified in relation to the known amino acid sequence of type I collagen. The hydroxylysine glycosides were determined in the relevant peptides providing a complete account of their distribution along this part of the collagen molecule. Most of the glycoside was found in the gap region of collagen especially near the edges of the axial holes where it could act as a peg to facilitate fibre formation. In addition, some glycoside was found in the overlap region where, being unable to fit into axial holes, it might impede the growth of the fibre and, with other glycoside of the overlap region, might be responsible for the narrow fibres of corneal collagen that are essential for corneal transparency. This glycoside, with that previously found in the peptide alpha 1-CB3 is the only hydroxylysine glycoside identified in the overlap region of a type I collagen.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
We have previously shown that platelets adhere to collagen substrates via a Mg2(+)-dependent mechanism mediated by the surface glycoprotein Ia-IIa (human leukocyte very late activation protein 2, alpha 2 beta 1 integrin) complex. The adhesion is specific for collagen and is supported by collagen types I, II, III, IV, and VI. Several other members of the integrin family of adhesive protein receptors recognize discrete linear amino acid sequences within their adhesive glycoprotein ligands. Experiments with both intact platelets and with liposomes containing the purified receptor complex indicated that the alpha 2 beta 1 receptor recognized denatured type I collagen in a Mg2(+)-dependent manner. To further localize the binding site, the alpha 1 and alpha 2 chains of type I collagen were purified by gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography and tested as adhesive substrates. Both the alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) chains effectively supported Mg2(+)-dependent platelet adhesion. The purified alpha 1(I) collagen chain was then subjected to cleavage with cyanogen bromide, and the resultant peptides were separated by chromatography on carboxymethylcellulose. Only the alpha 1(I)-CB3 fragment supported Mg2(+)-dependent platelet adhesion. The monoclonal antibody P1H5 which recognizes an epitope on the alpha 2 subunit of the integrin receptor and which inhibits the adhesion of both intact platelets and liposomes bearing the purified receptor to collagen also inhibited platelet adhesion to the alpha 1(I)-CB3 fragment. These results indicate that the alpha 2 beta 1 receptor recognizes a sequence of amino acids present in the alpha 1(I)-CB3 fragment of type I collagen. An identical or similar sequence likely mediates binding of the receptor to other collagen polypeptides.  相似文献   

12.
It is shown that regions of unreduced, insoluble cow hide collagen, represented by the peptides alpha 1(I)-CB6, alpha 2(I)-CB4 and the alpha 2(I)-CB3,5, are involved in the formation of unreducible acid-stable and mature-type crosslinks. The characteristic ratio of the CNBr peptides in soluble type I collagen was found to be changed in the insoluble collagen of cow hides. The intensity of the bands of alpha 1(I)-CB6, alpha 2(I)-CB4 and alpha 2(I)-CB3,5, shown by dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, is significantly reduced in such samples, which indicates an involvement of these peptides in crosslink formation. The purified highly polymeric CNBr peptide fraction was also investigated to confirm the participation of the alpha 2 chain of type I collagen in mature crosslink formation. Chymotryptic digests of such material contain peptides which originate from alpha 2(I)-CB4, alpha 2(I)-CB3,5, and alpha 1(I)-CB6. Finally, acid hydrolysates of crosslinked material were screened carefully for crosslinks down to concentrations of 1 in 1000 amino acids. Only two compounds were detected, one identified as "hydroxyaldol-histidine" and the other an as yet unknown compound. These results indicate that both the alpha 1(I) and the alpha 2(I) chains are involved in mature crosslink formation and that the polymeric CNBr peptide fraction contains components crosslinked by so far uncharacterized, nonreducible crosslinks.  相似文献   

13.
The human immune response to bovine dermal collagen was characterized through histologic, serologic, and immunoblotting methods. Collagen-sensitive patients were identified by hypersensitivity to intradermal exposure to ZYDERM Collagen Implant--a pepsin-solubilized, reconstituted, bovine dermal collagen. Biopsies of test sites in the forearm were obtained from several collagen-sensitive patients. Histologic examination revealed an implant-associated palisading foreign body granuloma. The lesion also contained a mixed cell infiltrate of histiocytes, lymphocytes, and eosinophils. Sera were collected from patients who developed erythema or induration at intradermal test or treatment sites, and were evaluated for antibodies to bovine dermal collagen by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Sera with anti-collagen antibodies were further characterized in this study. The circulating antibodies were reactive with both native and heat-denatured bovine dermal collagen. By using purified alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) polypeptides, these sera were found to have antibodies reactive with both alpha-chains. Each alpha-chain was fragmented by using cyanogen bromide (CB). The CB peptides were electrophoretically separated, and these sera were evaluated for antibodies to the major fragments by using an immunoblotting technique. Of the sera evaluated by this method, 89% (23/26) had antibodies to alpha 1-CB6; 77% (20/26) had antibodies to alpha 2-CB4; and 65% (17/26) had antibodies reactive with both CB fragments. In addition, most sera (77%) contained antibodies reactive with two or more (up to five) of the major CB peptides. The least antigenic fragment was alpha 2-CB3,5 (8%). In addition, these sera had antibody activity against both native and heat-denaturated bovine types III and II collagens. Little or no interspecies (rat or guinea pig) cross-reactivity (types I and II) was detected. Furthermore, these sera did not have antibodies against human types I, II, and III collagens.  相似文献   

14.
Collagen defects in lethal perinatal osteogenesis imperfecta.   总被引:15,自引:3,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
Quantitative and qualitative abnormalities of collagen were observed in tissues and fibroblast cultures from 17 consecutive cases of lethal perinatal osteogenesis imperfecta (OI). The content of type I collagen was reduced in OI dermis and bone and the content of type III collagen was also reduced in the dermis. Normal bone contained 99.3% type I and 0.7% type V collagen whereas OI bone contained a lower proportion of type I, a greater proportion of type V and a significant amount of type III collagen. The type III and V collagens appeared to be structurally normal. In contrast, abnormal type I collagen chains, which migrated slowly on electrophoresis, were observed in all babies with OI. Cultured fibroblasts from five babies produced a mixture of normal and abnormal type I collagens; the abnormal collagen was not secreted in two cases and was slowly secreted in the others. Fibroblasts from 12 babies produced only abnormal type I collagens and they were also secreted slowly. The slower electrophoretic migration of the abnormal chains was due to enzymic overmodification of the lysine residues. The distribution of the cyanogen bromide peptides containing the overmodified residues was used to localize the underlying structural abnormalities to three regions of the type I procollagen chains. These regions included the carboxy-propeptide of the pro alpha 1(I)-chain, the helical alpha 1(I) CB7 peptide and the helical alpha 1(I) CB8 and CB3 peptides. In one baby a basic charge mutation was observed in the alpha 1(I) CB7 peptide and in another baby a basic charge mutation was observed in the alpha 1(I) CB8 peptide. The primary defects in lethal perinatal OI appear to reside in the type I collagen chains. Type III and V collagens did not appear to compensate for the deficiency of type I collagen in the tissues.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The degree of hydroxylation of the lysine residue located in both alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-chains of collagen in the N-terminal, non-helical telopeptide region of the molecule has been determined in collagen from various sources after isolation of the peptides (alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-CB1) that contain the lysine residue in question and are obtained by cyanogen bromide cleavage of collagen alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-chains respectively. As with collagen from chick tibia, bone collagens from rat tibia and femur and embryonic chick frontal bone, have a high degree of hydroxylation (approx. 50% or more) of the lysine residue in both alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-CB1 peptides. This is in contrast with the lack of hydroxylation of this residue in both alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-chains of all skin collagens so far examined. The presence of hydroxylysine in alpha(1)- and alpha(2)-CB1 peptides from tendon collagen is also indicated. In rat tail tendon collagen the amount of hydroxylation is only slight but in the much less soluble tendon collagen from embryonic chick leg tendons, approximately one-third of the lysine is hydroxylated.  相似文献   

17.
Extracellular matrix components play an important role in modulating cellular activity. To study such capacities of the matrix, fibroblasts are frequently cultured in a three-dimensional gel and contraction is assessed as a measure of cellular activity. Since a connective tissue contains several types of collagen, we investigated the effect of gels composed of collagen I alone or in combination with 10% collagen III and/or 5% collagen V on contraction by human periodontal ligament fibroblasts. Gels containing collagen V contracted much faster than those without this type of collagen. Blocking of the integrin beta1-subunit with an activity-blocking antibody delayed (gels with collagen V) or almost completely blocked (gels without collagen V) contraction. Use of an antibody directed against integrin alpha2beta1 resulted in delay of gel contraction for gels both with and without collagen V. Anti-integrin alpha v beta3 or RGD peptides partially blocked contraction of gels containing collagen V, but had no effect on gels consisting of collagen I alone. The beta1-containing integrins are involved in the basal contraction by fibroblasts that bind to collagens I and III. The enhanced contraction, stimulated by collagen V, appears to be mediated by integrin alpha v beta3. We conclude that collagen V may play an important modulating role in connective tissue contraction. Such a modulation may occur during the initial stages of wound healing and/or tissue regeneration.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
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   

20.
[Alpha 1(III)]3 collagen was solubilized by pepsin digestion of normal human placental membranes and was purified by differential salt precipitation and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. This collagen was digested with CNBr, and the resultant nine peptides were isolated and characterized. The chains are cross-linked by cysteinyl residues in the COOH-terminal peptide. Isolation of peptides derived from CNBr digestion of insoluble tissues was used as an assay for the presence of [alpha 1(I)]2alpha 2 and [alpha 1(III)]3 collagens. Both types are present in human skin, intestine, liver, spleen, kidney, lung, aorta, umbilical cord, placental membranes, and myocardium. Bone and tendon contain [alpha 1(I)]2alpha 2 collagen but, unlike the other tissues, lack [alpha 1(III)]3 collagen. Both [alpha 1(I)]2alpha 2 and[alpha 1(III)]3 collagens are present in scars of human skin, myocardium, tendon, and liver and of rabbit skin. The degree of hydroxylation of proline was 4 to 5% lower in the same peptides in skin, bone, and tendon than in the other tissues. The degree of hydroxylation of lysine in the same peptides derived from different tissues varied more widely.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号