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1.
Nucleotide sequences were determined for cloned cDNAs encoding for more than half of the pro alpha 2 chain of type I procollagen from man. Comparisons with previously published data on homologous cDNAs from chick embryos made it possible to examine evolution of the gene in two species which have diverged for 250-300 million years. The amino acid sequence of the alpha-chain domain supported previous indications that there is a strong selective pressure to maintain glycine as every third amino acid and to maintain a prescribed distribution of charged amino acids. However, there is little apparent selective pressure on other amino acids. The amino acid sequence of the C-propeptide domain showed less divergence than the alpha-chain domain. The 5' end or N terminus of the human C-propeptide, however, contained an insert of 12 bases coding for 4 amino acids not found in the chick C-propeptide. About 100 amino acid residues from the N terminus, two residues found in the chick sequence were missing from the human. In the second half of the C-propeptide, there was complete conservation of a 37 amino acid sequence and conservation of 50 out of 51 amino acids in the same region, an observation which suggested that the region serves some special purpose such as directing the association of one pro alpha 2(I) C-propeptide with two pro alpha 1(I) C-propeptides so as to produce the heteropolymeric structure of type I procollagen. In addition, comparison of human and chick DNAs for pro alpha 2(I) revealed three different classes of conservation of nucleotide sequence which have no apparent effect on the structure of the protein: a preference for U on the third base position of codons for glycine, proline, and alanine; a high degree of nucleotide conservation in the 51 amino acid highly conserved region of the C-propeptide; a high degree of nucleotide conservation in the 3'-noncoding region. These three classes of nucleotide conservation may reflect unusual features of collagen genes, such as their high GC content or their highly repetitive coding sequences.  相似文献   

2.
We have determined the nucleotide sequence of the 5' untranslated region and the sequence encoding the signal peptide for mRNAs of the chick alpha 1 type I and alpha 1 type III collagen. These sequences were obtained by synthesizing the corresponding cDNAs using as primers either a synthetic oligonucleotide to prime alpha 1 type I cDNA or a DNA fragment isolated from a genomic clone coding for alpha 1 type III collagen to prime the cognate cDNA. Both primers were selected so that the resulting cDNAs would be short and would contain sequence information for the 5' untranslated region and the signal peptide of the proteins. The nucleotide sequences of these cDNAs were compared with the corresponding sequence of alpha 2 type I collagen. In each mRNA the 5' untranslated segment is approximately 130 nucleotides and contains two or more AUG triplets preceding the AUG which serves as a translation initiation codon. A sequence of about 50 nucleotides surrounding the translation initiation codon is remarkably conserved in all three mRNAs, whereas the sequences preceding and following this segment diverge markedly. This homologous sequence contains an almost identical inverted repeat sequence which could form a stable stem-loop structure. The initiation codon and the AUG which precedes it are found at the same place within this symmetrical sequence and the distance between them is invariant. The rest of the conserved sequence shows a less perfect symmetry. This conserved sequence has not been found in other genes. Our data suggest that these three and perhaps other collagen genes contain an identical regulatory signal that may play a role in determining the level of expression of these genes by modulating translational efficiency.  相似文献   

3.
We have isolated several overlapping cDNA clones encoding alpha 1(XI) collagen chains from human and rat cDNA libraries. Together the human cDNAs code for 335 uninterrupted Gly-X-Y triplets, and a 264-amino acid C-propeptide, while the rat cDNAs cover the entire C-propeptide and about a third of the triple-helical domain. Comparison of the human and rodent nucleotide sequences showed a 95% sequence similarity. The identification of the clones as alpha 1(XI) cDNAs was based on the complete identity between the amino acid sequences of three human alpha 1(XI) cyanogen bromide peptides and the cDNA-derived sequence. Examination of and the cDNA-derived amino acid sequence showed a variety of structural features characteristic of fibrillar-forming collagens. In addition, nucleotide sequence analysis of a selected portion of the corresponding human gene revealed the characteristic 54-base pair exon motif. We conclude therefore that pro-alpha 1 (XI) collagen belongs to the group of fibrillar collagen genes. We also suggest that the expression of this gene is not restricted to cartilage, as previously thought, since the cDNA libraries from which the clones were isolated, originated from both cartilagenous and noncartilaginous tissues.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The dermis of a child with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV (EDS-IV) contained about 11% of the normal amount of type III collagen and cultured dermal fibroblasts produced a reduced amount of type III procollagen which was secreted poorly. Type III collagen produced by these cells contained normal and abnormal alpha-chains and cyanogen bromide peptides. The site of the structural defect in the abnormal alpha 1 (III) chains was localized to the region of Met797, which is at the junction of the two carboxyl-terminal CB5 and CB9 cyanogen bromide peptides. Chemical cleavage of heteroduplexes formed between EDS-IV mRNA and a normal cDNA clone covering the CB5 and CB9 region showed that about 100 nucleotides were mismatched. Sequencing of amplified and cloned cDNA spanning the mutant region revealed a 108 nucleotide deletion corresponding to amino acid residues Gly775 to Lys810. The deleted nucleotide sequence corresponded to sequences that, by analogy to the organization of the type I collagen genes, should be precisely encoded by exon 41 of the COL3A1 gene. Sequencing of amplified genomic DNA, prepared using disimilar amounts of primers specific for exons 41 and 42, displayed a base substitution (G-to-A) in the highly conserved GT dinucleotide of the 5' splice site of intron 41. Normal sequences were also obtained from the normal allele. It is likely that the GT-to-AT transition at the splice donor site of intron 41 generated an abnormally spliced mRNA in which sequences of exon 40 and 42 were joined together with maintenance of the reading frame. The corresponding peptide deletion included the cyanogen bromide cleavage site Met797-Pro798 and the mammalian collagenase cleavage site at Gly781-Ile782. These losses account for the resistance of EDS-IV collagen to cyanogen bromide and mammalian collagenase digestion. Cultured fibroblasts produced normal homotrimer, mutant homotrimer, and mixed heterotrimer type III collagen molecules. The mutant homotrimer molecules were the major pepsin-resistant species and about 69% of the alpha 1(III) mRNA was in the mutant form.  相似文献   

6.
A cDNA clone from a human placental library was found to consist of an essentially full-length cDNA of 4.6 kb for the prepro alpha 2(I) chain of type I procollagen. Nucleotide sequencing of the 5'-end of the cDNA provided a sequence of 1617 nucleotide residues and codons for 539 amino acid residues not previously defined. Comparison of the complete structure of the prepro alpha 2(I) cDNA with previously reported sequences for the chicken pro alpha 2(I) gene indicated that 83% of 1366 total amino acid residues were conserved. In the alpha-chain domain 84% of 1014 amino acid residues were conserved. Also, there was conservation of the previously noted preference for U and C in the third position of codons for glycine, proline and alanine. One major difference between the human and the chicken prepro alpha 2(I) chain was that the human chain contained 21 fewer proline residues, an observation that probably explains why the triple helix of human type I procollagen unfolds at temperatures that are 1-2 degrees C lower. In parallel experiments, sequencing of intron-exon boundaries for nine exons of genomic subclones confirmed and extended previous observations that the pro alpha 2(I) gene, like other genes from fibrillar collagens, has an unusual 54-base pattern of exon sizes that is highly conserved through evolution.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The entire mouse cDNA sequence for type XIV collagen was determined using overlapping PCR products. The 6456 nucleotide (nt) cDNA sequence contains a 5391-nt open reading frame encoding 1797 amino acid residues. The amino terminus has a 28-residue signal peptide that is followed by the mature polypeptide of 1769 amino acid residues with a calculated molecular mass of 193.2 kDa. The mouse alpha1(XIV) collagen chain is predicted to contain all the structural domains described for the polypeptide in chicken and human. These include fibronectin type III repeats, von Willebrand factor A domains, thrombospondin-N-terminal-like domains and two triple-helical domains similar to those of other collagen family members. The amino acid residue sequence of human alpha1(XIV) collagen showed an overall identity of 74% to the chicken sequence and 88% to the human sequence. The entire mouse genomic structure has been determined and is made up of 48 exons. Alternatively spliced forms of mouse type XIV, collagen were not identified corresponding to the findings for the human form.  相似文献   

9.
The entire mouse cDNA sequence for type XIV collagen was determined using overlapping PCR products. The 6456 nucleotide (nt) cDNA sequence contains a 5391-nt open reading frame encoding 1797 amino acid residues. The amino terminus has a 28-residue signal peptide that is followed by the mature polypeptide of 1769 amino acid residues with a calculated molecular mass of 193.2 kDa. The mouse alpha1(XIV) collagen chain is predicted to contain all the structural domains described for the polypeptide in chicken and human. These include fibronectin type III repeats, von Willebrand factor A domains, thrombospondin-N-terminal-like domains and two triple-helical domains similar to those of other collagen family members. The amino acid residue sequence of human alpha1(XIV) collagen showed an overall identity of 74% to the chicken sequence and 88% to the human sequence. The entire mouse genomic structure has been determined and is made up of 48 exons. Alternatively spliced forms of mouse type XIV, collagen were not identified corresponding to the findings for the human form.  相似文献   

10.
The primary amino acid sequence of the carboxyl-terminal portion of the alpha 3 chain of chick type VI collagen as deduced from the nucleotide sequence is reported. This carboxyl-terminal segment is not present in the alpha 1 and alpha 2 chains of chick type VI collagen and is specific for a mosaic region with extensive similarities to several other proteins. This unique segment, beginning with a stretch (73 residues) very rich in serine and threonine, is preceded by sequences analogous to the platelet glycoprotein Ib. This region is followed by one segment that closely resembles the type III domains of fibronectin. At the end of the sequence, there is a 58-residue motif very similar to sequences characteristic of the Kunitz-type proteinase inhibitors. The present findings and our recent observation that the alpha 3(VI) chain contains 11 repeats similar to type A repeats of von Willebrand factor raise interesting questions about the peculiar mosaic structure and the multiple functions that this unique collagen might play in growth and remodeling of connective tissues.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
We have isolated a cDNA clone (pRcol 2) which is complementary to the 5'-terminal portion of the rat pro-alpha 1(II) chain mRNA. A synthetic oligonucleotide was used both as a primer for cDNA synthesis and as a probe for screening a cDNA library. The probe was a mixture of sixteen 14-mers deduced from an amino acid sequence present in the amino-terminal telopeptide of the rat cartilage alpha 1(II) chain. This primer was chosen so that the resulting cDNA would contain the sequence of the 5' end of the mRNA. The nucleotide sequences of the cDNA were determined and compared with that of three other interstitial procollagen chain mRNAs (pro-alpha 1(I), pro-alpha 2(I), and pro-alpha 1(III) chain mRNA). pRcol 2 contains a 521-base pair (bp) insert, including 153 bp of the 5' untranslated region plus 368 bp coding for the signal peptide, the amino-terminal propeptide, and a part of the telopeptide. The signal peptide of the type II collagen chain is composed of about 20 amino acids. There is little homology between the amino acid sequence of the signal peptide in the pro-alpha 1(II) chain and that of three other interstitial procollagen chains. The NH2-terminal propeptide is deduced to contain short nonhelical sequences at its amino and carboxyl ends and an internal helical collagenous domain comprising 25 repeats of Gly-X-Y with one interruption. There is a strong conservation of the amino acid sequence of the carboxyl-terminal part of the NH2-terminal propeptide in the pro-alpha 1(II), pro-alpha 1(I), and pro-alpha 2(I) chains. Type II collagen mRNA does not contain a sequence corresponding to a uniquely conserved nucleotide sequence around the translation initiation site which occurs in mRNA for other procollagen chains.  相似文献   

13.
We recently cloned and sequenced alpha 1 (VIII) collagen cDNAs and demonstrated that type VIII collagen is a short-chain collagen that contains both triple helical and carboxyl-terminal non-triple helical domains similar to those of type X collagen (Yamaguchi, N., Benya, P., van der Rest, M., and Ninomiya, Y. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 16022-16029). We report here on the structural organization of the gene encoding the rabbit alpha 1 (VIII) collagen chain. The alpha 1 (VIII) gene contains four exons, whose sizes are 69, 120, 331, and 2278 base pairs. The first and second exons encode only 5'-untranslated sequences, whereas the third exon codes for a very short (3 nucleotides) stretch of 5'-untranslated sequence, the signal peptide, and almost the entire amino-terminal non-triple helical (NC2) domain (109 1/3 codons). Interestingly, the last exon encodes the rest of the translated region, including 7 2/3 codons of the NC2 domains, the complete triple helical domain (COL1, 454 amino acid residues), the entire carboxyl-terminal non-triple helical domain (NC1, 173 amino acid residues), and the 3'-untranslated region. This exon-intron structure is in stark contrast to the multi-exon structure of the fibrillar collagen (types I, II, III, V, and XI) genes, but it is remarkably similar to that of the type X collagen gene (LuValle, P., Ninomiya, Y., Rosenblum, N. D., and Olsen, B. R. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 18278-18385). The data suggest that the alpha 1 (VIII) and the alpha 1 (X) genes belong to the same subclass within the collagen family and that they arose from a common evolutionary precursor.  相似文献   

14.
J F Lees  M Tasab    N J Bulleid 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(5):908-916
A key question relating to procollagen biosynthesis is the way in which closely related procollagen chains discriminate between each other to assemble in a type-specific manner. Intracellular assembly of procollagen occurs via an initial interaction between the C-propeptides followed by vectorial propagation of the triple-helical domain in the C to N direction. Recognition signals within the C-propeptides must, therefore, determine the selective association of individual procollagen chains. We have used the pro alpha1 chain of type III procollagen [pro alpha1(III)] and the pro alpha2 chain of type I procollagen [pro alpha2(I)] as examples of procollagen chains that are either capable or incapable of self-assembly. When we exchanged the C-propeptides of the pro alpha1(III) chain and the pro alpha(I) chain we demonstrated that this domain is both necessary and sufficient to direct the assembly of homotrimers with correctly aligned triple-helices. To identify the sequences within this domain that determine selective association we constructed a series of chimeric procollagen chains in which we exchanged specific sequences from the pro alpha1(III) C-propeptide with the corresponding region within the pro alpha2(I) C-propeptide (and vice versa) and assayed for the ability of these molecules to form homotrimers. Using this approach we have identified a discontinuous sequence of 15 amino acids which directs procollagen self-association. By exchanging this sequence between different procollagen chains we can direct chain association and, potentially, assemble molecules with defined chain compositions.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence for TEF-1, one of three genes coding for elongation factor (EF)-1 alpha in Mucor racemosus. The deduced EF-1 alpha protein contains 458 amino acids encoded by two exons. The presence of an intervening sequence located near the 3' end of the gene was predicted by the nucleotide sequence data and confirmed by alkaline S1 nuclease mapping. The amino acid sequence of EF-1 alpha was compared to the published amino acid sequences of EF-1 alpha proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Artemia salina. These proteins shared nearly 85% homology. A similar comparison to the functionally analogous EF-Tu from Escherichia coli revealed several regions of amino acid homology suggesting that the functional domains are conserved in elongation factors from these diverse organisms. Secondary structure predictions indicated that alpha helix and beta sheet conformations associated with the functional domains in EF-Tu are present in the same relative location in EF-1 alpha from M. racemosus. Through this comparative structural analysis we have predicted the general location of functional domains in EF-1 alpha which interact with GTP and tRNA.  相似文献   

17.
The alpha 1(VI) and alpha 2(VI) chains, two of the three constituent chains of type VI collagen, are highly similar in size and domain structure. They are encoded by single-copy genes residing in close proximity on human chromosome 21. To study the evolution of the type VI collagen genes, we have isolated and characterized genomic clones coding for the triple-helical domains of the human alpha 1(VI) and alpha 2(VI) chains, which consist of 336 and 335 amino acid residues, respectively. Nucleotide sequencing indicates that, in both genes, the exons are multiples of 9 bp in length (including 27, 36, 45, 54, 63, and 90 bp) except for those encoding for regions with triple-helical interruptions. In addition, the introns are positioned between complete codons. The most predominant exon size is 63 bp, instead of 54 bp as seen in the fibrillar collagen genes. Of particular interest is the finding that the exon structures of the alpha 1(VI) and alpha 2(VI) genes are almost identical. A significant deviation is that a segment of 30 amino acid residues is encoded by two exons of 54 and 36 bp in the alpha 1(VI) gene, but by a single exon of 90 bp in the alpha 2(VI) gene. The exon arrangement therefore provides further evidence that the two genes have evolved from tandem gene duplication. Furthermore, comparison with the previously reported gene structure of the chick alpha 2(VI) chain indicates that the exon structure for the triple-helical domain of the alpha 2(VI) collagen is strictly conserved between human and chicken.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Promoter region of the human pro-alpha 1(II)-collagen gene   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A M Nunez  K Kohno  G R Martin  Y Yamada 《Gene》1986,44(1):11-16
  相似文献   

20.
C Genovese  D Rowe  B Kream 《Biochemistry》1984,23(25):6210-6216
Type I collagen mRNA from fetal rat calvaria was used as a template for the synthesis of a cDNA that was subsequently inserted in the PstI site of the plasmic vector pBR322 and cloned. Three recombinant plasmids containing type I collagen specific sequences were characterized: p alpha 1R1 is 1600 bp and spans approximately 500 amino acid residues within the triple helical region of alpha 1(I) and p alpha 1R2 is 900 bp in size and covers the entire 3' noncoding and about half of the C-terminal propeptide region of alpha 1(I) collagen mRNA. The third recombinant p alpha 2R2 is 1500 bp and contains alpha 2(I) sequences specific for the entire 3' noncoding and C-terminal propeptide region. Partial nucleic acid sequence data revealed that the decreasing order of amino acid and nucleotide homology to similar regions of the rat cDNA was mouse greater than human greater than chick. Northern hybridization of mRNA after electrophoresis in 0.8% agarose revealed two distinctly different molecular weight patterns characteristic of alpha 1(I) (4.7 and 5.7 kb) and alpha 2(I) (4.2 and 4.5 kb) collagen mRNA when hybridized with the corresponding cDNA probe. Despite the high degree of sequence homology, DNA probes from rat or human produced a significantly reduced hybridization signal when used as an interspecies hybridization probe than to its corresponding mRNA. The rat cDNA probes were used in a dot hybridization assay to measure the type I collagen mRNA content in the fetal rat calvaria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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