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1.
Interaction with the extracellular matrix is important for the proliferation and differentiation of cells during development. A specialized extracellular matrix, basement membrane, is built around a scaffold of procollagen IV molecules. We report the sequence of a 2.5-kilobase cDNA which contains the carboxyl end of a Drosophila melanogaster procollagen IV. The amino acid sequence of the carboxyl-terminal domain, which forms an essential intermolecular linkage between procollagen IV molecules, is 59% identical in Drosophila and vertebrate procollagens IV, and an additional 17% of residues are conservatively substituted. This implies that the nature of the linkage is also conserved. We suggest that intermolecular junctions through procollagen IV carboxyl domains are fundamental elements of the molecular architecture of Metazoan basement membranes and have been conserved during evolution. The isolation and identification of this basement membrane collagen gene of Drosophila will help in deducing the function of procollagen IV in basement membranes.  相似文献   

2.
Assembly and processing of procollagen type III in chick embryo blood vessels   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The processing of [3H]proline-labeled procollagen III in excised chick embryo blood vessels was found to differ significantly from that of procollagen I in the same tissue. While first the amino propeptides and then the carboxyl propeptides were fairly rapidly cleaved from procollagen I, only the carboxyl propeptides were split off procollagen III, leaving pN-collagen III. This intermediate, which is only slowly converted to collagen III by loss of amino propeptides, was characterized by its sedimentation properties, isolation of the amino propeptide, and reaction with purified antibodies that are specific against bovine amino propeptide III. It is interchain disulfide-linked, both through the amino propeptide and the carboxyl ends of the collagen chains. The conversion of procollagen III to pN-collagen III either in blood vessels, or after isolation by a carboxyl procollagen peptidase obtained from chick tendon fibroblast cultures, is inhibited by 50 mM arginine. Underhydroxylated procollagen III was isolated from blood vessels treated with alpha, alpha'-dipyridyl. Its amino propeptides reacted with the above antibodies but were not linked to each other. In contrast, its carboxyl propeptides were interchain disulfide-bridged, supporting previous suggestions that the carboxyl propeptides play a role in the assembly of procollagen trimer.  相似文献   

3.
During the biosynthesis and assembly of collagen structures, disulfide links can serve several functions. During biosynthesis they successively stabilize intra-peptide folding and associations of three chains into one molecule. Studies on the refolding and reassociation of reduced and denatured carboxyl propeptides of procollagen I showed that successive interactions of folding and assembly are successively weaker. Disulfide bridges were reestablished within correctly refolded carboxyl propeptides. Rearrangements of disulfide bridges may occur during the processing of type V procollagen molecules as these collagens become incorporated into extracellular matrix. The basement membrane procollagen IV molecules become disulfide linked at each end into networks, and there are indications that further rearrangements of disulfide links may allow additional modulation.  相似文献   

4.
The specific mammalian collagenase isolated from cultures of metastatic mouse PMT sarcoma cells cleaves murine procollagen IV into two segments, of approximate mass ratio 3:1. These fragments were separated by velocity sedimentation, visualized by electron microscopy, and analyzed. The longer COOH-terminal procollagen segment has a 270-nm collagenous portion with a knob at one end. This knob consists of the three previously identified, noncollagenous carboxyl propeptides, of approximately 30,000 daltons each. These carboxyl propeptides are chain-specific, and the three chains of each segment have the same amino to carboxyl orientation. The collagenase cuts through all three chains at one site, and the three-component chains of both the longer COOH-terminal procollagen segment and the shorter NH2-terminal procollagen segment are linked by interchain disulfide bridges. The enzyme cuts off the same COOH-terminal procollagen segment from procollagen IV monomers and tetramers, and the flexibility of this segment is similar to that of interstitial collagen helices. The amino ends of the NH2-terminal procollagen segments derived from tetramers remain joined as the 32-nm long "7 S collagen" junctional complex, and the remaining 89-nm long projecting threads are significantly more flexible than the COOH-terminal procollagen segment. The electrophoretic mobilities of the enzyme cleavage products are consistent with a heterotrimeric composition of this procollagen IV.  相似文献   

5.
A Drosophila melanogaster gene for a basement membrane procollagen chain was recently identified from the sequence homology of the carboxyl (NC1) end of the polypeptide that it encodes with the corresponding domain of human and murine collagens IV (Blumberg, B., MacKrell, A. J., Olson, P. F., Kurkinen, M., Monson, J. M., Natzle, J. E., and Fessler, J. H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 5947-5950). This gene is at chromosome location 25C. Here we report the complete 6-kilobase cDNA sequence coding for a chain of 1775 amino acids, as well as the genomic structure. The gene is composed of nine relatively large exons separated by eight relatively small introns. This organization is different from the multiple small exons separated by large introns reported for mouse and human type IV collagens (Kurkinen, M., Bernard, M. P., Barlow, D. P., and Chow, L. T. (1985) Nature 317, 177-179. Sakurai, Y., Sullivan, M., and Yamada, Y. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 6654-6657. Soininen, R., Tikka, L., Chow, L., Pihlajaniemi, T., Kurkinen, M., Prockop, D. J., Boyd, C. D., and Tryggvason, K. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 1568-1572). Drosophila and human alpha 1(IV) procollagen chains share not only polypeptide domains near their amino and carboxyl ends for making specialized, intermolecular junctional complexes, but also 11 of 21 sites of imperfections of the collagen triple helix. However, neither the number nor the nature of the amino acids in these imperfections appear to have been conserved. These imperfections of the helical sequence may be important for the supramolecular assembly of basement membrane collagen. The 9 cysteine residues of the Drosophila collagen thread domain are arranged as several variations of a motif found in vertebrate collagens IV only near their amino ends, in their "7 S" junctional domains. The relative positions of these cysteine residues provide numerous opportunities for disulfide bonding between molecules in both parallel and antiparallel arrays. There is a pseudorepeat of one-third of the thread length, and there are numerous possibilities for disulfide-linked microfibrils and networks. We propose that collagen microfibrils, stabilized by disulfide segment junctions, are a versatile ancestral form from which specialized collagen fibers and networks arose.  相似文献   

6.
Shape and assembly of type IV procollagen obtained from cell culture.   总被引:13,自引:3,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
Type IV procollagen was isolated from the culture medium of the teratocarcinoma cell line PYS-2 by affinity chromatography on heparin-Sepharose. Immunological studies showed that type IV procollagen is composed of pro-alpha 1(IV) and pro-alpha 2(IV) chains and contains two potential cross-linking sites which are located in the short triple-helical 7S domain and the globular domain NC1 . The 7S domain was also identified as the heparin binding site. Rotary shadowing visualized type IV procollagen as a single triple-helical rod (length 388 nm) with a globule at one end. Some of the procollagen in the medium, however, had formed aggregates by alignment of 2-4 molecules along their 7S domains. After deposition in the cell matrix, non-reducible cross-links between the 7S domains are formed while the globules of two procollagen molecules connect to each other. The latter may require a slight proteolytic processing of the globular domains NC1 . The shape of type IV procollagen and the initial steps in its assembly are compatible with a recently proposed network of type IV collagen molecules in basement membranes. Since both type IV collagen and laminin bind to heparin, the formation of higher ordered structures by interaction of both proteins with heparan-sulfate proteoglycan may occur in situ.  相似文献   

7.
Basement membranes are thin sheets of specialized extracellular matrix molecules that are important for supplying mechanical support and for providing an interactive surface for cell morphology. Prior to secretion and assembly, basement membrane molecules undergo intracellular processing, which is essential for their function. We have identified several mutations in a procollagen processing enzyme, lysyl hydroxylase (let-268). The Caenorhabditis elegans lysyl hydroxylase is highly similar to the vertebrate lysyl hydroxylase, containing all essential motifs required for enzymatic activity, and is the only lysyl hydroxylase found in the C. elegans sequenced genome. In the absence of C. elegans lysyl hydroxylase, type IV collagen is expressed; however, it is retained within the type IV collagen-producing cells. This observation indicates that in let-268 mutants the processing and secretion of type IV collagen is disrupted. Our examination of the body wall muscle in these mutant animals reveals normal myofilament assembly prior to contraction. However, once body wall muscle contraction commences the muscle cells separate from the underlying epidermal layer (the hypodermis) and the myofilaments become disorganized. These observations indicate that type IV collagen is required in the basement membrane for mechanical support and not for organogenesis of the body wall muscle.  相似文献   

8.
A monoclonal antibody, IV-IA8, generated against chicken type IV collagen has been characterized and shown to bind specifically to a conformational-dependent site within a major, triple helical domain of the type IV molecule. Immunohistochemical localization of the antigenic determinant with IV-IA8 revealed that the basement membranes of a variety of chick tissues were stained but that the basement membrane of the corneal epithelium showed little, if any, staining. Thus, basement membranes may differ in their content of type IV collagen, or in the way in which it is assembled. The specificity of the antibody was determined by inhibition ELISA using purified collagen types I-V and three purified molecular domains of chick type IV collagen ([F1]2F2, F3, and 7S) as inhibitors. Only unfractionated type IV collagen and the (F1)2F2 domain bound the antibody. Antibody binding was destroyed by thermal denaturation of the collagen, the loss occurring at a temperature similar to that at which previous optical rotatory dispersion studies had shown melting of the triple helical structure of (F1)2F2. Such domain-specific monoclonal antibodies should prove to be useful probes in studies involving immunological dissection of the type IV collagen molecule, its assembly within basement membranes, and changes in its distribution during normal development and in disease.  相似文献   

9.
A collagen was isolated from Drosophila E85, Schneider line 2L and Kc cell cultures. The purified protein was characterized and antibodies were raised against it. Immunofluorescence microscopy locates this material to the regions of basement membranes of Drosophila embryos, larvae, and adults. The molecules are mostly, or entirely, homotrimers of one polypeptide chain linked by interchain disulfide bonds. The partial amino acid sequences of a cyanogen bromide cleavage product of this chain are identical with a part of the virtual translation product of the Drosophila pro alpha 1(IV) nucleotide sequence that is reported in the accompanying paper. This gene is at Drosophila chromosome location 25C and was identified by the high homology of one part of it with the noncollagenous carboxyl terminus (NC1) of vertebrate type IV basement membrane collagens (Blumberg, B., MacKrell, A. J., Olson, P. F., Kurkinen, M., Monson, J. M., Natzle, J. E., and Fessler, J. H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 5947-5950). In the electron microscope each molecule appears as a thread with a knob at one end, which contains the carboxyl peptide domains. The variation of flexibility of the thread was mapped along its length. Pulse-chase labeling of cell cultures showed that these molecules associate into disulfide-linked dimers and higher oligomers that can be partly separated by velocity sedimentation and are resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-agarose gel electrophoresis. Dimers and higher oligomers formed by overlap of the amino ends of molecules were found. Mild pepsin digestion of Drosophila embryos and larvae solubilized the corresponding disulfide-linked collagen molecules, and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease peptide maps showed the identity of the collagen derived from animals and from cell cultures. Individual, native molecules have a sedimentation coefficient s20,w = 4.1 S, the dichroic spectrum and amino acid composition of a collagen, and a Tm = 31 degrees C. Positive in situ hybridization with a specific probe for this collagen began 6-8 h after egg laying and showed message in the locations of embryos and larvae which reacted with the antibodies. This included some prominent individual cells in the hemolymph.  相似文献   

10.
Type IV (alpha 1 and alpha 2 chains) appears to be the only procollagen present in basement membranes. The structure of this protein is highly divergent from the interstitial and type V procollagens as exemplified by the interruptions in the Gly-X-Y region and unprocessed amino and carboxyl noncollagenous peptides. To expand our knowledge concerning the primary sequence of type IV and to investigate the factors influencing its unique distribution, we recently isolated cDNA clones coding for part of the human alpha 1(IV) chain. To determine if the alpha 1(IV) gene was cytologically linked to other procollagen genes that have been assigned to autosomes 17, 12, 7, and 2, overlapping clones covering 2.6 kilobases (kb) of the alpha 1(IV) mRNA were used together for in situ hybridization to human metaphase chromosomes. Here, we show precise localization of alpha 1(IV) at the telomere of 13q, thereby defining a fifth chromosome that contains members of this large and surprisingly dispersed multigene family.  相似文献   

11.
The histogenesis of renal basement membranes was studied in grafts of avascular, 11-day-old mouse embryonic kidney rudiments grown on chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM). Vessels of the chick CAM invade the mouse tissue during an incubation period of 7-10 days and eventually hybrid glomeruli composed of mouse epithelium and chick endothelium form. Formation of basement membranes during this development was followed by immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase stainings using polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies against mouse and chick collagen type IV and against mouse laminin. These antibodies were species-specific as shown in immunochemical and immunohistologic analyses. The glomerular basement membrane contained both mouse and chick collagen type IV, demonstrating its dual cellular origin. All other basement membranes were either exclusively of chick origin (mesangium, vessels) or of mouse origin (tubuli, Bowman's capsule).  相似文献   

12.
Frozen sections of the growing end of the rat incisor tooth were exposed to antisera or affinity prepared antibodies against partially purified type I, II, or IV procollagen in the hope of detecting the location of the corresponding antigens by the peroxidase-anti-peroxidase technique. The distribution of immunostaining was similar with antisera as with purified antibodies of a given type, but differed for each type; that is, predentin, odontoblasts, pulp and periodontal tissue were the sites of type I; blood vessel walls, pulp and periodontal tissue, of type III; and basement membranes, of type IV antigenicity. It was demonstrated, at least in cases of type I and III, that immunostaining detected the corresponding procollagens and related substances, but not the corresponding collagens. The interpretation of these observations is that: 1) odontoblasts elaborate procollagen I for release to predentin and subsequent transformation to dentinal collagen I; 2) pulp and periodontal cells produce procollagens I and III which presumably become collagens I and III respectively, while the adventitial cells of blood vessels give rise to collagen III; and 3) procollagen IV is associated with basement membranes and, occasionally, adjacent cells.  相似文献   

13.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(4):1837-1848
The deposition of intestinal heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) at the epithelial-mesenchymal interface and its cellular source have been studied by immunocytochemistry at various developmental stages and in rat/chick interspecies hybrid intestines. Polyclonal heparan sulfate antibodies were produced by immunizing rabbits with HSPG purified from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm mouse tumor; these antibodies stained rat intestinal basement membranes. A monoclonal antibody (mAb 4C1) produced against lens capsule of 11-d-old chick embryo reacted with embryonic or adult chick basement membranes, but did not stain that of rat tissues. Immunoprecipitation experiments indicated that mAb 4C1 recognized the chicken basement membrane HSPG. Immunofluorescent staining with these antibodies allowed us to demonstrate that distribution of HSPG at the epithelial-mesenchymal interface varied with the stages of intestinal development, suggesting that remodeling of this proteoglycan is essential for regulating cell behavior during morphogenesis. The immunofluorescence pattern obtained with the two species-specific HSPG antibodies in rat/chick epithelial/mesenchymal hybrid intestines developed as grafts (into the coelomic cavity of chick embryos or under the kidney capsule of adult mice) led to the conclusion that HSPG molecules located in the basement membrane of the developing intestine were produced exclusively by the epithelial cells. These data emphasize the notion already gained from previous studies, in which type IV collagen has been shown to be produced by mesenchymal cells (Simon- Assmann, P., F. Bouziges, C. Arnold, K. Haffen, and M. Kedinger. 1988. Development (Camb.). 102:339-347), that epithelial-mesenchymal interactions play an important role in the formation of a complete basement membrane.  相似文献   

14.
R H Kramer  G M Fuh  M A Karasek 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7423-7430
Cultured microvascular endothelial cells isolated from human dermis were examined for the synthesis of basement membrane specific (type IV) collagen and its deposition in subendothelial matrix. Biosynthetically radiolabeled proteins secreted into the culture medium were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis after reduction, revealing a single collagenous component with an approximate Mr of 180 000 that could be resolved into two closely migrating polypeptide chains. Prior to reduction, the 180 000 bands migrated as a high molecular weight complex, indicating the presence of intermolecular disulfide bonding. The 180 000 material was identified as type IV procollagen on the basis of its selective degradation by purified bacterial collagenase, moderate sensitivity to pepsin digestion, immunoprecipitation with antibodies to human type IV collagen, and comigration with type IV procollagen purified from human and murine sources. In the basement membrane like matrix elaborated by the microvascular endothelial cells at their basal surface, type IV procollagen was the predominant constituent. This matrix-associated type IV procollagen was present as a highly cross-linked and insoluble complex that was solubilized only after denaturation and reduction of disulfide bonds. In addition, there was evidence of nonreducible dimers and higher molecular weight aggregates of type IV procollagen. These findings support the suggestion that the presence of intermolecular disulfide bonds and other covalent interactions stabilizes the incorporation of the type IV procollagen into the basement membrane matrix. Cultured microvascular endothelial cells therefore appear to deposit a basal lamina-like structure that is biochemically similar to that formed in vivo, providing a unique model system that should be useful for understanding microvascular basement membrane metabolism, especially as it relates to wound healing, tissue remodeling, and disease processes.  相似文献   

15.
Basement membranes are specialized extracellular matrices consisting of tissue-specific organizations of multiple matrix molecules and serve as structural barriers as well as substrates for cellular interactions. The network of collagen IV is thought to define the scaffold integrating other components such as, laminins, nidogens or perlecan, into highly organized supramolecular architectures. To analyze the functional roles of the major collagen IV isoform alpha1(IV)(2)alpha2(IV) for basement membrane assembly and embryonic development, we generated a null allele of the Col4a1/2 locus in mice, thereby ablating both alpha-chains. Unexpectedly, embryos developed up to E9.5 at the expected Mendelian ratio and showed a variable degree of growth retardation. Basement membrane proteins were deposited and assembled at expected sites in mutant embryos, indicating that this isoform is dispensable for matrix deposition and assembly during early development. However, lethality occurred between E10.5-E11.5, because of structural deficiencies in the basement membranes and finally by failure of the integrity of Reichert's membrane. These data demonstrate for the first time that collagen IV is fundamental for the maintenance of integrity and function of basement membranes under conditions of increasing mechanical demands, but dispensable for deposition and initial assembly of components. Taken together with other basement membrane protein knockouts, these data suggest that laminin is sufficient for basement membrane-like matrices during early development, but at later stages the specific composition of components including collagen IV defines integrity, stability and functionality.  相似文献   

16.
A general mechanism for the assembly of procollagens is proposed from a biosynthetic study of procollagen III. This was shown to proceed by a stepwise process punctuated by disulfide bond formation and an assembly intermediate was recovered. The biosynthesis of type III procollagen in excised chick embryo blood vessels was studied by radioactive labeling for 30 min. Velocity sedimentation under denaturing conditions and purified antibodies specific against bovine amino propeptide III were used to identify and characterize monomeric pro alpha 1 III chains and a type III procollagen intermediate which is interchain disulfide-linked only at the carboxyl end but not at the amino end. The monomeric chains presumably have intrachain disulfide bonds within the propeptides. The monomeric pro alpha 1 III chains were also found when alpha, alpha'-dipyridyl was present during incubation. Pulse-chase experiments show that the monomeric chains and the intermediate are biosynthetic precursors of type III procollagen. Furthermore, it is shown that monomeric pro alpha 1 chains are not triple helical when extracted under nondenaturing conditions. The results indicate that the assembly of pro alpha 1 III chains into type III procollagen starts with the association of the folded carboxyl propeptides and is followed by formation of disulfide bonds between carboxyl propeptides, folding of the triple helix, and formation of disulfide bonds between amino propeptides. All procollagens may follow a similar assembly sequence.  相似文献   

17.
Nidogen (entactin) can form a ternary complex with type IV collagen and laminin and is thought to play a critical role in basement membrane assembly. We show that the Caenorhabditis elegans nidogen homologue nid-1 generates three isoforms that differ in numbers of rod domain endothelial growth factor repeats and are differentially expressed during development. NID-1 appears at the start of embryonic morphogenesis associated with muscle cells and subsequently accumulates on pharyngeal, intestinal, and gonad primordia. In larvae and adults NID-1 is detected in most basement membranes but accumulates most strongly around the nerve ring and developing gonad. NID-1 is concentrated under dense bodies, at the edges of muscle quadrants, and on the sublateral nerves that run under muscles. Two deletions in nid-1 were isolated: cg119 is a molecular null, whereas cg118 produces truncated NID-1 missing the G2 collagen IV binding domain. Neither deletion causes overt abnormal phenotypes, except for mildly reduced fecundity. Truncated cg118 NID-1 shows wild-type localization, demonstrating that the G2 domain is not necessary for nidogen assembly. Both nid-1 mutants assemble type IV collagen in a completely wild-type pattern, demonstrating that nidogen is not essential for type IV collagen assembly into basement membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Basement membranes are defining features of the cellular microenvironment; however, little is known regarding their assembly outside cells. We report that extracellular Cl ions signal the assembly of collagen IV networks outside cells by triggering a conformational switch within collagen IV noncollagenous 1 (NC1) domains. Depletion of Cl in cell culture perturbed collagen IV networks, disrupted matrix architecture, and repositioned basement membrane proteins. Phylogenetic evidence indicates this conformational switch is a fundamental mechanism of collagen IV network assembly throughout Metazoa. Using recombinant triple helical protomers, we prove that NC1 domains direct both protomer and network assembly and show in Drosophila that NC1 architecture is critical for incorporation into basement membranes. These discoveries provide an atomic-level understanding of the dynamic interactions between extracellular Cl and collagen IV assembly outside cells, a critical step in the assembly and organization of basement membranes that enable tissue architecture and function. Moreover, this provides a mechanistic framework for understanding the molecular pathobiology of NC1 domains.  相似文献   

19.
Type VII collagen, in the form of an antiparallel dimer, is a major protein component of anchoring fibrils. The ultrastructural appearance of these fibrils suggests that they may serve to anchor the basement membrane zone to the underlying connective tissue matrix. We report here the identification and initial characterization of Type VII procollagen, recovered from the media of epidermoid carcinoma cell cultures. Immunoblotting using monospecific antibodies to Type VII procollagen identifies a single, homogeneous band of at least Mr 320,000 following disulfide bond reduction. This chain contains 170 kDa of collagen triple helix and 150 kDa of non-helical domain at the carboxyl terminus. Pepsin digestion of this material yields Type VII collagen identical to that isolated from whole tissue and a series of quasi-stable peptides derived from the carboxyl-terminal region. Cell extracts contain procollagen chains identical in size to those secreted into the media. There is no evidence for processing of this material in cell culture. Partial purification by velocity sedimentation and transmission electron microscopic observation following rotary shadowing reveals both monomers (426 nm) and dimers (785 nm). Dimers are antiparallel and interact through 60-nm overlap, with amino-terminal globular domains present at the ends of the overlap. The multi-domain carboxyl-terminal region appears as three similar arms originating from a centralized globular region adjacent to the collagen helix. The carboxyl globular domain is present in whole tissue and may participate in the unique fibril form of this collagen. The amino-terminal globule may function in the antiparallel assembly of dimers.  相似文献   

20.
Vascular basement membrane contains laminin, fibronectin, proteoglycan and collagens. These molecules have been identified in various tissues by immunolabeling methods and biochemical analyses. We have previously localized laminin, fibronectin and type IV collagen to the basement membrane of rat retinal vessels at the ultrastructural level using an immunoperoxidase method. In this study, we use an immunogold method to re-examine the distribution of these molecules and also to study the localization of heparan sulfate proteoglycan and types I, III and V collagen in the retinal capillary basement membrane. Gold labeling for laminin, type IV collagen and proteoglycan were found diffusely on the basement membrane of the endothelium and pericyte, while that for fibronectin and type V collagen was spotty and variable and that for types I and III collagen was negligible. The segment of basement membrane between the endothelial cell and pericyte appeared less reactive to anti-laminin and anti-type IV collagen than the membrane between the pericyte and perivascular neuroretina. The immunogold method may be useful in quantitative studies of thickened basement membranes under abnormal conditions.  相似文献   

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