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1.
A novel type IV collagen, alpha 3(IV), has previously been isolated from a collagenase digest of bovine and human glomerular and lens basement membranes. The cloning and sequencing of a cDNA encoding the alpha 3(IV) chain is described here. Using the polymerase chain reaction, with primers derived from the known 27-residue bovine alpha 3(IV) amino acid sequence, a 68-base pair bovine genomic fragment (KEM68) which encodes the known peptide sequence, was synthesized. KEM68 was then used to screen a bovine lens cDNA library and a 1.5-kilobase partial cDNA clone obtained, encoding 471 residues of the bovine alpha 3(IV) chain: 238 residues from the triple helical collagenous domain and all 233 residues of the noncollagenous domain. The collagenous repeat sequence has three interruptions, coinciding with those in the alpha 1(IV) chain. The noncollagenous domain has 12 cysteine residues in identical positions to those of other type IV collagens and 71, 61, and 70% overall similarity with the human alpha 1(IV), alpha 2(IV), and alpha 5(IV) chains. The noncollagenous domain of alpha 3(IV) is of particular interest as it appears to be the component of glomerular basement membrane that reacts maximally with the Goodpasture antibody. Furthermore, such antigenicity is absent from collagenase digests of the glomerular basement membrane of some patients with Alport syndrome. The alpha 3(IV) cDNA clone described here now permits study of the molecular pathology of COL4A3 in Alport syndrome.  相似文献   

2.
The sequence of 511 residues from the C-terminal portion of the triple helix of mouse alpha 2(IV) chain was determined by using the pepsin fragment P2 of collagen IV and two cDNA clones selected from an Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm (EHS) tumor library. The sequence contains nine interruptions of the triplet repeat Gly-Xaa-Yaa ranging in size from single insertions or deletions up to stretches of eleven amino acid residues. Five of these interruptions match those present in the homologous segment of the alpha 1(IV) chain but are otherwise different in length and/or sequence. A low homology was found for the triplet regions of the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chain which constitute more than 90% of the sequence. The data indicate a remote evolutionary relationship of the triple-helical sequences of the two constituent chains of basement membrane collagen.  相似文献   

3.
We have determined the nucleotide and amino acid sequences of mouse alpha 2(IV) collagen which is 1707 amino acids long. The primary structure includes a putative 28-residue signal peptide and contains three distinct domains: 1) the 7 S domain (residues 29-171), which contains 5 cysteine and 8 lysine residues, is involved in the cross-linking and assembly of four collagen IV molecules; 2) the triple-helical domain (residues 172-1480), which has 24 sequence interruptions in the Gly-X-Y repeat up to 24 residues in length; and 3) the NC1 domain (residues 1481-1707), which is involved in the end-to-end assembly of collagen IV and is the most highly conserved domain of the protein. Alignment of the primary structure of the alpha 2(IV) chain with that of the alpha 1(IV) chain reported in the accompanying paper (Muthukumaran, G., Blumberg, B., and Kurkinen, M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 6310-6317) suggests that a heterotrimeric collagen IV molecule contains 26 imperfections in the triple-helical domain. The proposed alignment is consistent with the physical data on the length and flexibility of collagen IV.  相似文献   

4.
We have determined the primary structure of the alpha 1(IV)-chain of human type IV collagen by nucleotide sequencing of overlapping cDNA clones that were isolated from a human placental cDNA library. The present data provide the sequence of 295 amino acids not previously determined. Altogether, the alpha 1(IV)-chain contains 1642 amino acids and has a molecular mass of 157625 Da. There are 1413 residues in the collagenous domain and 229 amino acids in the carboxy-terminal globular domain. The human alpha 1(IV)-chain contains a total of 21 interruptions in the collagenous Gly-X-Y repeat sequence. These interruptions vary in length between two and eleven residues. The alpha 1(IV)-chain contains four cysteine residues in the triple-helical domain, four cysteines in the 15-residue long noncollagenous sequence at the amino-terminus and 12 cysteines in the carboxy-terminal NC-domain.  相似文献   

5.
We have isolated two overlapping cDNA clones that provide the complete nucleotide sequence coding for the NC-1 domain and 3'-untranslated region of the alpha 2 chain of human type IV collagen as well as a sequence encoding 232 residues of the collagenous domain. An extensive homology was observed between the sequences of the NC-1 domain of the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains, but considerably less between the sequences encoding collagenous and 3'-untranslated regions. There were four interruptions in the collagenous sequence studied whereas the comparable region of the alpha 1(IV) chain had only two. A potential oligosaccharide attachment site was found in a 6-residue long interruption of the collagenous domain but none in the NC-1 domain.  相似文献   

6.
P Nath  M Laurent  E Horn  M E Sobel  G Zon  G Vogeli 《Gene》1986,43(3):301-304
We have isolated a cDNA clone (pCIV-1-225) for the alpha 1 subunit of basement membrane (type IV) collagen from a cDNA library made from Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm mouse tumor RNA. The cDNA library was screened with synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides derived from published amino acid (aa) sequences (Schuppan et al., 1982). Nucleotide sequence data established the identity of our cDNA clone to encode an alpha 1 type IV collagen. This clone contains 270 aa of the helical region and has three interruptions in the Gly-X-Y repeat unit.  相似文献   

7.
We report here the complete nucleotide and amino acid sequences for the alpha 1-chain of mouse collagen IV which is 1669 amino acids in length, including a putative 27-residue signal peptide. In comparison with the amino acid sequence for the alpha 2-chain (Saus, J., Quinones, S., MacKrell, A. J., Blumberg, B., Muthkumaran, G., Pihlajaniemi, J., and Kurkinen, M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 6318-6324), the two chains of collagen IV are 43% identical. Most of the interruptions of the Gly-X-Y repeat are homologously placed but strikingly show no sequence similarity between the two chains. Availability of the amino acid sequences for human collagen IV allows a detailed comparison of the primary structure of collagen IV and reveals evolutionarily conserved domains of the protein. Between the two species, the alpha 1 (IV) chains are 90.6% and the alpha 2 (IV) chains are 83.5% identical in sequence. We discuss these data with respect to differential evolution between and within the collagen IV chain types.  相似文献   

8.
The complete primary structure of the human type IV collagen alpha 2(IV) chain has been determined by nucleotide sequencing of cDNA clones. The overlapping cDNA clones cover 6,257 base pairs with a 5'-untranslated region of 283 base pairs, the 5,136-base pair open reading frame, and the 3'-untranslated region of 838 base pairs. The predicted amino acid sequence demonstrates that the complete translation product consists of 1,712 residues corresponding in molecular weight to 167,560. The translated polypeptide has a signal peptide of 36 amino acids, an amino-terminal noncollagenous part of 21 residues, a 1,428-residue collagenous domain with 23 interruptions, and a carboxyl-terminal noncollagenous (NC) domain of 227 residues. The calculated molecular mass of the mature human alpha 2(IV) chain is 163,774 Da.  相似文献   

9.
We have isolated and characterized overlapping cDNA clones which code for a previously unidentified human collagen chain. Although the cDNA-derived primary structure of this new polypeptide is very similar to the basement membrane collagen alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains, the carboxyl-terminal collagenous/non-collagenous junction sequence does not correspond to the junction sequence in either of the newly described alpha 3(IV) or alpha 4(IV) chains (Butkowski, R.J., Langeveld, J.P.M., Wieslander, J., Hamilton, J., and Hudson, B. G. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 7874-7877). Thus the protein presented here has been designated the alpha 5 chain of type IV collagen. Four clones encode an open reading frame of 1602 amino acids that cover about 95% of the entire chain including half of the amino-terminal 7S domain and all of the central triple-helical region and carboxyl-terminal NC1 domain. The collagenous region of the alpha 5(IV) chain contains 22 interruptions which are in most cases identical in distribution to those in both the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains. Despite the relatively low degree of conservation among the amino acids in the triple-helical region of the three type IV collagen chains, analysis of the sequences clearly showed that alpha 5(IV) is more related to alpha 1(IV) than to alpha 2(IV). This similarity between the alpha 5(IV) and alpha 1(IV) chains is particularly evident in the NC1 domains where the two polypeptides are 83% identical in contrast to the alpha 5(IV) and alpha 2(IV) identity of 63%. In addition to greatly increasing the complexity of basement membranes, the alpha 5 chain of type IV collagen may be responsible for specialized functions of some of these extracellular matrices. In this regard, it is important to note that we have recently assigned the alpha 5(IV) gene to the region of the X chromosome containing the locus for a familial type of hereditary nephritis known as Alport syndrome (Myers, J.C., Jones, T.A., Pohjalainen, E.-R., Kadri, A.S., Goddard, A.D., Sheer, D., Solomon, E., and Pihlajaniemi, T. (1990) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 46, 1024-1033). Consequently, the newly discovered alpha 5(IV) collagen chain may have a critical role in inherited diseases of connective tissue.  相似文献   

10.
We cloned three overlapping cDNAs covering 2,452 base pairs encoding a new basement membrane collagen chain, alpha 4(IV), from rabbit corneal endothelial cell RNA. Nucleotide sequence analysis demonstrated that the clones encoded a triple-helical domain of 392 1/3 amino acid residues and a carboxyl non-triple-helical (NC1) domain of 231 residues. We also isolated a genomic DNA fragment for the human alpha 4(IV) chain, which contained two exons encoding from the carboxyl end of the triple-helical domain to the amino end of the NC1 domain. Identification of the clones was based on the amino acid sequence identity between the cDNA-deduced amino acid sequence and the reported amino acid sequence obtained from a fragment of the alpha 4(IV) collagen polypeptide M28+ (Butkowski, R. J., Shen, G.-Q., Wieslander, J., Michael, A. F., and Fish, A. J. (1990) J. Lab. Clin. Med. 115, 365-373). When compared with four other type IV collagen chains, the NC1 domain contained 12 cysteinyl residues in positions identical to those of the residues in those chains. The domain demonstrated 61, 70, 55, and 60% amino acid similarity with human alpha 1, human alpha 2, bovine alpha 3, and human alpha 5 chains, respectively. The human genomic DNA fragment allowed us to map the alpha 4(IV) gene (COL4A4) to the 2q35-2q37.1 region of the human genome.  相似文献   

11.
The organizational relationship between the recently identified alpha 3 chain of basement membrane collagen (Butkowski, R.J., Langeveld, J.P.M., Wieslander, J., Hamilton, J., and Hudson, B.G. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 7874-7877) and collagen IV was determined. This was accomplished by the identification of subunits in hexamers of the NC1 domain of collagen IV that were immunoprecipitated with antibodies prepared against subunits M1, corresponding to alpha 1(IV)NC1 and alpha 2(IV)NC1, and M2, corresponding to alpha 3NC1, and by amino acid sequence analysis. The presence of at least two distinct types of hexamers was revealed, one enriched in M1 and the other enriched in M2, but in both types, M1 and M2 coexist. Evidence was also obtained for the existence of heterodimers comprised of M1 and M2. These results indicate that M2 is an integral component of the NC1 hexamer of collagen IV. The amino acid sequence of the NH2-terminal region of M2 was found to be highly related to the collagenous-NC1 junctional region of the alpha 1 chain of collagen IV. Therefore, M2 is designated alpha 3(IV)NC1 and its parent chain alpha 3(IV). These findings lead to a new concept about the structure of collagen IV: namely, 1) collagen IV is comprised of a third chain (alpha 3) together with the two classical ones (alpha 1 and alpha 2); the alpha 3(IV) chain exists within the same triple-helical molecule together with the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains and/or within a separate triple-helical molecule, exclusive of alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains, but connected through the NC1 domains to the classical triple-helical molecule comprised of alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains. Additionally, a portion of those triple-helical molecules exclusive of alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains may be connected to each other through their NC1 domains; and 3) the epitope to which the major reactivity of autoantibodies are targeted in glomerular basement membrane in patients with Goodpasture syndrome is localized to the NC1 domain of the alpha 3(IV) chain.  相似文献   

12.
We have isolated and characterized cDNA and genomic DNA clones which encode an alpha 2(IV) collagen chain from the parasitic nematode Ascaris suum. In addition we have determined, by nucleic acid sequence analysis, the structural organization of approximately two-thirds of the gene. This analysis has shown that the gene contains at least 15 introns, and those that have been characterized range in size from 141 to 854 base pairs. The derived protein sequence contains 1763 amino acids and includes a putative 26-amino acid signal sequence. The collagenous triple-helical region contains 17 interruptions, many of which occur in the same positions as those in the human alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains. Comparison of the genomic DNA sequence with the cDNA sequence has revealed the presence of a sequence within the gene which appears to be an intact and normal exon that is not represented in our cDNA sequence. The presence of this putative exon raises the possibility that the A. suum alpha 2(IV) collagen gene may undergo alternative splicing.  相似文献   

13.
The Goodpasture antigen has been identified as the non-collagenous (NC1) domain of alpha 3(IV), a novel collagen IV chain (Saus, J., Wieslander, J., Langeveld, J., Quinones, S., and Hudson, B.G. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 13374-13380). In the present study, the exon/intron structure and sequence for 285 amino acids of human alpha 3(IV), comprising 53 amino acids of the triple-helical domain and the complete NC1 domain (232 amino acids), were determined. Based on the comparison of the amino acid sequences of the alpha 1(IV), alpha 2(IV), alpha 3(IV), and alpha 5(IV) NC1 domains, a phylogenetic tree was constructed which indicates that alpha 2(IV) was the first chain to evolve, followed by alpha 3(IV), and then by alpha 1(IV) and alpha 5(IV). The exon/intron structure of these domains is consistent with this evolution model. In addition, it appears that alpha 3(IV) changed most after diverging from the parental gene. Analysis of its primary structure reveals that, at the junction between the triple-helical and NC1 domains, there exists a previously unrecognized, highly hydrophilic region (GLKGKRGDSGSPATWTTR) which is unique to the human alpha 3(IV) chain, containing a cell adhesion motif (RGD) as an integral part of a sequence (KRGDSGSP) conforming to a number of protein kinase recognition sites. Based on primary structure data, we outline new aspects to be explored concerning the molecular basis of collagen IV function and Goodpasture syndrome.  相似文献   

14.
Collagens comprise a large superfamily of extracellular matrix proteins that play diverse roles in tissue function. The mechanism by which newly synthesized collagen chains recognize each other and assemble into specific triple-helical molecules is a fundamental question that remains unanswered. Emerging evidence suggests a role for the non-collagenous domain (NC1) located at the C-terminal end of each chain. In this study, we have investigated the molecular mechanism underlying chain selection in the assembly of collagen IV. Using surface plasmon resonance, we have determined the kinetics of interaction and assembly of the alpha1(IV) and alpha2(IV) NC1 domains. We show that the differential affinity of alpha2(IV) NC1 domain for dimer formation underlies the driving force in the mechanism of chain discrimination. Given its characteristic domain recognition and affinity for the alpha1(IV) NC1 domain, we conclude that the alpha2(IV) chain plays a regulatory role in directing chain composition in the assembly of (alpha1)(2)alpha2 triple-helical molecule. Detailed crystal structure analysis of the [(alpha1)(2)alpha2](2) NC1 hexamer and sequence alignments of the NC1 domains of all six alpha-chains from mammalian species revealed the residues involved in the molecular recognition of NC1 domains. We further identified a hypervariable region of 15 residues and a beta-hairpin structural motif of 13 residues as two prominent regions that mediate chain selection in the assembly of collagen IV. To our knowledge, this report is the first to combine kinetics and structural data to describe molecular basis for chain selection in the assembly of a collagen molecule.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The chain origins of subunits M1, M2*, and M3 previously described (Butkowski, R. L., Wieslander, J., Wisdom, B.J., Barr, J.F., Noelken, M.E., and Hudson, B.G. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 3739-3747) of the globular domain of basement membrane collagen were identified, by amino-terminal amino acid sequence analysis, with respect to their relationship to the chains of collagen IV. M1 comprises two polypeptides which correspond to the noncollagenous segments (NC1) of the alpha 1 ad alpha 2 chains of collagen IV. M2*, containing the Goodpasture epitope, and M3 are distinct from these two constituents and from each other but have Gly-X-Y triplets and hydroxyproline at their amino terminus, reflecting the fact that each has a collagen chain origin. These results indicate the presence of two new collagen chains in basement membrane. These new chains appear to be integral components of collagen IV molecules. Alternatively, they could represent new molecular species of basement membrane collagen containing a globular domain, comprising M2* and M3, with physicochemical properties very similar to those of collagen IV.  相似文献   

17.
Three distinctive heparin-binding sites were observed in type IV collagen by the use of rotary shadowing: in the NC1 domain and at distances 100 and 300 nm from the NC1 domain. Scatchard analysis indicated different affinities for these sites. Electron microscopic analysis of heparin-type IV collagen interaction with increasing salt concentrations showed the different affinities to be NC1 greater than 100 nm greater than 300 nm. The NC1 domain bound specifically to chondroitin/dermatan sulfate side chains as well. This binding was observed at the electron microscope and in solid-phase binding assays (where chondroitin sulfate could compete for the binding of [3H]heparin to NC1-coated substrata). The triple helix-rich, rod-like domain of type IV collagen did not bind to chondroitin/dermatan sulfate side chains. In solid-phase binding assays only heparin could compete for the binding of [3H]heparin to this domain. In order to more precisely map potential heparin-binding sites in type IV collagen, we chemically synthesized 17 arginine- and lysine-containing peptides from the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains. Three peptides from the known sequence of the alpha 1(IV) and alpha 2(IV) chains were shown to specifically bind heparin: peptide Hep-I (TAGSCLRKFSTM), from the alpha 1(NC1) chain, peptide Hep-II (LAGSCLARFSTM), a peptide corresponding to the same sequence in peptide Hep-I from the alpha 2 (NC1) chain, and peptide Hep-III (GEFYFDLRLKGDK) which contained an interruption of the triple helical sequence of the alpha 1(IV) chain at about 300 nm from the NC1 domain, were demonstrated to bind heparin in solid-phase binding assays and compete for the binding of [3H]heparin to type IV collagen-coated substrata. Therefore, each of these peptides may represent a potential heparin-binding site in type IV collagen. The mapping of the binding of heparin or related structures, such as heparan sulfate proteoglycan, to specific sequences of type IV collagen could help the understanding of several structural and functional properties of this basement membrane protein as well as interactions with other basement membrane and/or cell surface-associated macromolecules.  相似文献   

18.
19.
We have isolated two overlapping cDNA clones covering 2425 base pairs encoding a short type VIII collagen chain synthesized by rabbit corneal endothelial cells. The cDNAs encode an open reading frame of 744 amino acid residues containing a triple-helical domain of 454 residues flanked by 117- and 173-residue amino and carboxyl non-triple-helical domains (called NC2 and NC1, respectively). Based on the identity between the DNA-derived amino acid sequence and the amino acid sequence of a type VIII collagen CNBr peptide obtained from rabbit corneal Descemet's membrane, we conclude that the cDNAs code for a type VIII collagen chain. We give this chain the designation alpha 1(VIII). The alpha 1(VIII) triple-helical domain contains eight imperfections in the Gly-X-Y repeated structure with Gly-X instead of a full triplet. The length of the triple-helical domain and number and relative locations of these imperfections are remarkably similar to those of chicken alpha 1(X) collagen. The amino acid sequence of the carboxyl three-quarters of the NC1 domain has high sequence similarity to that of alpha 1(X) collagen. These data suggest that the triple-helix coding portions and carboxyl three-quarters of the NC1 domains of the alpha 1(VIII) and alpha 1(X) genes have a common evolutionary origin.  相似文献   

20.
NC1, the C-terminal non-collagenous globular domain of collagen IV, represents one of the two end regions responsible for the assembly and cross-linking of the extracellular network of basement membrane collagen. Several cDNA clones for the NC1 domain of the alpha 1(IV) collagen chain of mouse have been isolated by using synthetic oligonucleotides as screening probes for mouse libraries. The oligonucleotides were synthesized according to known stretches of the corresponding protein sequence. Sequencing of the overlapping cDNA clones allowed the complete amino acid sequence of the NC1 domain to be deduced as well as the C-terminal 165 amino acid residues of the triple helix. It consists of 229 amino acid residues which comprise two homologous regions with a high content of cysteine. These DNA and protein sequences are compared to the corresponding sequences of other collagens and discussed with respect to their structural and biological significance.  相似文献   

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