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1.
Understanding the mechanism of stabilization of collagen is an important area of research. Metal ions are known to interact with collagen and bring about the stability of the same. In the present investigation, the interaction of zirconium(IV) complexes with collagen was studied. The effect of zirconium(IV) complexes, namely zirconium oxychloride and zirconium oxalate on the enzymatic and thermal stability of collagen was investigated. Zirconium has been found to increase the hydrothermal stability of the rat tail tendon (RTT) collagen fibers to about 8-10 degrees C more than that of the native collagen. The order of stabilization of zirconium(IV) complexes is zirconium oxychloride>zirconium oxalate. This could be due to the differences in the type of interaction with collagen, which is also reflected in the differences in the conformational changes of collagen brought about by the two complexes. Zirconium oxychloride, which forms tetrameric species in solution, has been shown to have better crosslinking with collagen as seen from viscometry studies and hence provides better enzymatic stability to collagen than zirconium oxalate, which largely forms monomeric species in solution.  相似文献   

2.
Type I collagen from rat tail tendon (RTT) fibres was crosslinked with dialdehyde cellulose to bring about stabilization of the matrix. Dialdehyde cellulose (DAC) was prepared by periodate oxidation of hydrolyzed cellulose. Autoclaving of DAC resulted in hydrolysis and lower molecular weight oligomeric species. The formation of the crosslinked network between DAC and the collagen fibres has brought about significant thermal and enzymatic stability to collagen. DAC crosslinked collagen fibres exhibited an increase in hydrothermal stability by 20 °C with autoclaved DAC at pH 8. The collagen matrix resulted in an increase in denaturation peak temperature (TD) and an increase in phase change of activation energy (Ea) and enthalpy change (ΔH) for the shinking process indicating intermolecular crosslinking arising from covalent interactions. Thermal stability and crosslinking efficiency was found to increase with pH and concentration of DAC. DAC treated collagen exhibited 93% resistance to collagenolytic hydrolysis.  相似文献   

3.
Stabilization of type I rat tail tendon (RTT) collagen by various aldehydes, viz. formaldehyde, gluteraldehyde, glyoxal and crotanaldehyde was studied to understand the effect of each on the thermal, enzymatic and conformational stability of collagen. The aldehydes have been found to increase the heat stability of rat tail tendon collagen fibres from 62 to 77-86 degrees C. The increase in thermal stability was found to be in a species dependent manner. The variation in the thermal stability of collagen brought about by aldehydes was in the order of formaldehyde > gluteraldehyde > glyoxal > crotanaldehdye. The aldehydes also impart a high degree of stability to collagen against the activity of the degrading enzyme, collagenase. The order of enzymatic stability brought about by aldehydes follows the same trend as the thermal stability brought about by them. This shows that the number of cross-links formed influence both the thermal and enzymatic stability in the similar manner. The effect of various aldehydes on the secondary structure of collagen was studied using circular dichroism and it was found that the aldehydes lead to changes in the amplitude of the circular dichroic (CD) spectrum but did not alter the triple helical conformation of collagen. The secondary structure of collagen is not significantly altered on interaction with different aldehydes.  相似文献   

4.
The molecular basis of nonlinear optical (NLO) chiral effects in the amide I region of type I collagen was investigated using sum-frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy; chiral and achiral tensor elements were separated using different input/output beam polarization conditions. Spectra were obtained from native rat tail tendon (RTT) collagen and from cholesteric liquid crystal-like (LC) type I collagen films. Although RTT and LC collagen both possess long-range order, LC collagen lacks the complex hierarchical organization of RTT collagen. Their spectra were compared to assess the role of such organization in NLO chirality. No significant differences were observed between RTT and LC with respect to chiral or achiral spectra. These findings suggest that amide I NLO chiral effects in type I collagen assemblies arise predominantly from the chiral organization of amide chromophores within individual collagen molecules, rather than from supramolecular structures. The study suggests that sum-frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy may be uniquely valuable in exploring fundamental aspects of chiral nonlinearity in complex macromolecular structures.  相似文献   

5.
The subunit compositions of skin and muscle type I collagens from rainbow trout were found to be alpha1(I)alpha2(I)alpha3(I) and [alpha1(I)](2)alpha2(I), respectively. The occurrence of alpha3(I) has been observed only for bonyfish. The skin collagen exhibited more susceptibility to both heat denaturation and MMP-13 digestion than the muscle counterpart; the former had a lower denaturation temperature by about 0.5 degrees C than the latter. The lower stability of skin collagen, however, is not due to the low levels of imino acids because the contents of Pro and Hyp were almost constant in both collagens. On the other hand, some cDNAs coding for the N-terminal and/or a part of triple-helical domains of proalpha(I) chains were cloned from the cDNA library of rainbow trout fibroblasts. These cDNAs together with the previously cloned collagen cDNAs gave information about the complete primary structure of type I procollagen. The main triple-helical domain of each proalpha(I) chain had 338 uninterrupted Gly-X-Y triplets consisting of 1014 amino acids and was unique in its high content of Gly-Gly doublets. In particular, the bonyfish-specific alpha(I) chain, proalpha3(I) was characterized by the small number of Gly-Pro-Pro triplets, 19, and the large number of Gly-Gly doublets, 38, in the triple-helical domain, compared to 23 and 22, respectively, for proalpha1(I). The small number of Gly-Pro-Pro and the large number of Gly-Gly in proalpha3(I) was assumed to partially loosen the triple-helical structure of skin collagen, leading to the lower stability of skin collagen mentioned above. Finally, phylogenetic analyses revealed that proalpha3(I) had diverged from proalpha1(I). This study is the first report of the complete primary structure of fish type I procollagen.  相似文献   

6.
In the integrin family, the collagen receptors form a structurally and functionally distinct subgroup. Two members of this subgroup, alpha(1)beta(1) and alpha(2)beta(1) integrins, are known to bind to monomeric form of type I collagen. However, in tissues type I collagen monomers are organized into large fibrils immediately after they are released from cells. Here, we studied collagen fibril recognition by integrins. By an immunoelectron microscopy method we showed that integrin alpha(2)I domain is able to bind to classical D-banded type I collagen fibrils. However, according to the solid phase binding assay, the collagen fibril formation appeared to reduce integrin alpha(1)I and alpha(2)I domain avidity to collagen and to lower the number of putative alphaI domain binding sites on it. Respectively, cellular alpha(1)beta(1) integrin was able to mediate cell spreading significantly better on monomeric than on fibrillar type I collagen matrix, whereas alpha(2)beta(1) integrin appeared still to facilitate both cell spreading on fibrillar type I collagen matrix and also the contraction of fibrillar type I collagen gel. Additionally, alpha(2)beta(1) integrin promoted the integrin-mediated formation of long cellular projections typically induced by fibrillar collagen. Thus, these findings suggest that alpha(2)beta(1) integrin is a functional cellular receptor for type I collagen fibrils, whereas alpha(1)beta(1) integrin may only effectively bind type I collagen monomers. Furthermore, when the effect of soluble alphaI domains on type I collagen fibril formation was tested in vitro, the observations suggest that integrin type collagen receptors might guide or even promote pericellular collagen fibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
As the sugar moiety of Tamm-Horsfall protein (THP) is affected by many pathological conditions, the aim of this study was to examine the influence of carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome (CDG) on THP glycans. THP was isolated from urine of one patient with CDG type I and N-glycan profiling, analysis of monosaccharide content, determination of THP reactivity with specific lectins and with anti-THP antibodies were performed. THP of the CDG patient showed markedly lower amounts of all monosaccharides. Diminished amounts of lactosamine-type chains, galactose and alpha2,3 linked sialic acid were expressed in lower reactivity with PHA-L, DSA and MAA, respectively. These modifications were reflected in altered proportions of tetrasialylated and disialylated oligosaccharide chains. THP of the CDG patient reacted slightly more with anti-THP antibodies. Our results indicate that the CDG type I affects the THP sugar moiety and slightly enhances the THP immunoreactivity.  相似文献   

8.
We report a case of mild osteogenesis imperfecta in a 56-year-old male undergoing aortic valve replacement surgery. The primary defect in this patient was the substitution of arginine for glycine 85 in one of the two chains of alpha 1(I) procollagen. The thermal stability of the type I collagen synthesized by the patient's cultured skin fibroblasts was examined by enzymatic digestion. Digestion of the mutant type I collagen with trypsin and chymotrypsin at increasing temperatures sequentially generated three discrete collagenous fragments, approximately 90, 170, and 230 amino acids shorter than normal type I collagen. This incremental thermal denaturation is indicative of cooperative melting blocks within the type I collagen. This is the first demonstration of such cooperative blocks of melting in intact, essentially normal post-translationally modified type I collagen. This direct evidence for cooperative melting domains of uncut type I collagen suggests that discrete blocks of amino acids function as core sites stabilizing the collagen helix. The location of mutations of the alpha chains of type I collagen relative to these discrete blocks of amino acids may influence the severity of the disease phenotype.  相似文献   

9.
Collagen is an essential component of tissues, which is the most abundant component in extracellular matrix and highly conserved across the animal kingdom. It can assemble into fiber and play an essential role in cell adhesion and growth and could be extremely useful in tissue engineering. In this study, the effect of tannic acid (TA) on the thermal, enzymatic and conformational stability of type I collagen has been investigated for the development of collagen‐based biomaterials. Interaction of TA with collagen demonstrates the role of hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interaction in providing the thermal and enzymatic stability. Thermal analysis studies reveal that, hydrothermal stability of collagen increases as well as inhibits the breakdown of collagenase by formation of hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions. TA binds to the collagen with high affinity because the structural flexibility of the collagen compensates for the structural rigidity of the phenolics. Increase in concentration of TA induces significant change in the conformation of triple helix. The free binding energy of TA with collagen‐like peptide was determined to be in the range of ?9.4 to ?11.2 kcal mol?1, which was calculated by using Autodock Vina software and showed numerous hydrophobic and hydrogen bond interactions. We anticipate that these collagen‐based biomaterials hold great potential for biomedical applications. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 101: 471–483, 2014.  相似文献   

10.
The activity of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) is regulated stringently on the posttranslational level. MMP-2 efficiently undergoes autolysis into inactive polypeptides in vitro, prompting the hypothesis that MMP-2 autolysis may function as an alternative mechanism for posttranslational control of MMP-2 in vivo. Moreover, MMP-2 binds to intact type I collagen fibrils; however, the functional consequences of this interaction have not been fully elucidated. To test the hypothesis that MMP-2 binding to type I collagen functions as a positive regulator of MMP-2 proteolytic potential, the effect of type I collagen on MMP-2 activity, inhibition by tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2 (TIMP-2), and enzyme stability was examined. Here, we report that purified MMP-2 binds but does not cleave intact type I collagen. The presence of type I collagen affects neither enzymatic activity against a quenched fluorescent peptide substrate nor the kinetics of inhibition by TIMP-2. However, MMP-2 is stabilized from autolysis in the presence of type I collagen, but not by elastin, fibrinogen, or laminin. These data provide biochemical evidence that MMP-2 exosite interactions with type I collagen may function in the posttranslational control of MMP-2 activity by reducing the rate of autolytic inactivation.  相似文献   

11.
A baby with the lethal perinatal form of osteogenesis imperfecta was shown to have a structural defect in the alpha 1(I) chain of type I procollagen. Normal and mutant alpha 1(I) CB8 cyanogen bromide peptides, from the helical part of the alpha 1(I) chains, were purified from bone. Amino acid sequencing of tryptic peptides derived from the mutant alpha 1(I) CB8 peptide showed that the glycine residue at position 391 of the alpha 1(I) chain had been replaced by an arginine residue. This substitution accounted for the more basic charged form of this peptide that was observed on two-dimensional electrophoresis of the collagen peptides obtained from the tissues. The substitution was associated with increased enzymatic hydroxylation of lysine residues in the alpha 1(I) CB8 and the adjoining CB3 peptides but not in the carboxyl-terminal CB6 and CB7 peptides. This finding suggested that the sequence abnormality had interfered with the propagation of the triple helix across the mutant region. The abnormal collagen was not incorporated into the more insoluble fraction of bone collagen. The baby appeared to be heterozygous for the sequence abnormality and as the parents did not show any evidence of the defect it is likely that the baby had a new mutation of one allele of the pro-alpha 1(I) gene. The amino acid substitution could result from a single nucleotide mutation in the codon GGC (glycine) to produce the codon CGC (arginine).  相似文献   

12.
To isolate collagen-binding cell surface proteins, detergent extracts of surface-iodinated MG-63 human osteosarcoma cells were chromatographed on affinity matrices of either type I collagen-Sepharose or Sepharose carrying a collagen-like triple-helical peptide. The peptide was designed to be triple helical and to contain the sequence Arg-Gly-Asp, which has been implicated as the cell attachment site of fibronectin, vitronectin, fibrinogen, and von Willebrand factor, and is also present in type I collagen. Three radioactive polypeptides having apparent molecular masses of 250 kD, 70 kD, and 30 kD were distinguishable in that they showed affinity toward the collagen and collagen-like peptide affinity columns, and could be specifically eluted from these columns with a solution of an Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptide, Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Thr-Pro. These collagen-binding polypeptides associated with phosphatidylcholine liposomes, and the resulting liposomes bound specifically to type I collagen or the collagen-like peptide but not to fibronectin or vitronectin or heat-denatured collagen. The binding of these liposomes to type I collagen could be inhibited with the peptide Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Thr-Pro and with EDTA, but not with a variant peptide Gly-Arg-Gly-Glu-Ser-Pro. We conclude from these data that these three polypeptides are membrane molecules that behave as a cell surface receptor (or receptor complex) for type I collagen by interacting with it through the Arg-Gly-Asp tripeptide adhesion signal. The lack of binding to denatured collagen suggests that the conformation of the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence is important in the recognition of collagen by the receptor complex.  相似文献   

13.
The corneal stroma of the chick embryo is deposited in two steps. The primary stroma is laid down by the corneal epithelium and it contains type I, type II and type IX collagens. Its formation is subsequent to the presumptive epithelial cells' migration onto the lens capsule (which is rich in type IV collagen). The secondary, ultimate stroma is synthesized by fibroblasts whcih, on day 5 of development, invade the swollen primary stroma. It is composed of a matrix of thin (25 nm), regular fibrils containing type I and type V collagens.We found that a chick corneal epithelium isolated from either a 6-day or a 14-day embryo was able to produce, in vitro, stroma-containing type I collagen fibrils. However, the amount of collagen deposited and its organization were highly dependent on the substratum used. Plastic or purified bovine type I collagen substrata led to the release of very few fibrils. Purified human type IV collagen induced the production of an abundant matrix made of large irregular collagen fibrils.When compared to native corneal stroma, there were two aspects in which this matrix differed: (1) it contained only type I collagen, as shown by indirect immunofluorescence, and (2) there were numerous large, irregular fibrils of about 100 to 130 nm in diameter.In conclusion, it is suggested that purified type IV collagen substitutes, in part, for the basement membrane and allows the production of a corneal stroma-like matrix by an embryonic corneal epithelium in culture. This production is possible even with a 14-day epithelium which, in vivo, is no more involved in the synthesis of the stroma collagens. Moreover, the regulatory effect of type II collagen, previously suggested by in vivo observations, may be confirmed in this in vitro system by the appearance of large fibrils in the newly deposited stroma that are made only by type I collagen.  相似文献   

14.
Carbamylation is a post-translational modification due to nonenzymatic binding of cyanate, a by-product of urea, on free amino groups of proteins. Post-translational modifications are known to induce alterations in structural and functional properties of proteins, thus disturbing protein-protein or cell-protein interactions. We report the impact of carbamylation on type I collagen sensitivity to enzymatic proteolysis. Type I collagen was extracted from rat tail tendons and carbamylated by incubation with 0.1 M potassium cyanate at 37 degrees C for 2, 6 or 24 h. Degradation assays revealed that carbamylated collagen exhibited a greater resistance to collagenases (i.e. bacterial collagenase, matrix metalloproteinase(MMP)-1, MMP-8 and MMP-13), together with an increased sensitivity to MMP-2. Evaluation of collagen triple helix conformation by polarimetry indicated that local destabilizations of triple helix structure related to carbamylation could be responsible for the observed differences in sensitivity. These results confirm the crucial role of triple helix integrity in the degradation of type I collagen by MMPs, and support the deleterious impact of post-translational modifications in vivo by altering the balanced remodeling of collagen within connective tissue.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The nature of chromium(III) complexes has been found to show a profound influence in its interaction with collagen. The hydrothermal stability of rat tail tendon (RTT) fibres treated with dimeric, trimeric and tetrameric species of chromium(III) has been found to be 102, 87 and 68 degrees C, while that of native RTT is 62 degrees C. This shows that the efficiency of crosslinking of collagen by chromium(III) species is dimeric > trimeric > tetrameric. This order of stabilisation is again confirmed by cyanogen bromide (CNBr) cleavage of RTT collagen treated with dimeric, trimeric and tetrameric chromium(III) species. CNBr has been found to cleave the collagen treated with tetrameric chromium(III) species extensively. On the other hand, dimer-treated collagen does not undergo any cleavage on CNBr treatment. The equilibrium constants for the reaction of a nucleophile like NCS(-) to the dimeric, trimeric and tetrameric species of chromium(III) have been found to be 15.7+/-0.1, 14.6+/-0.1 and 1.2+/-0.1 M(-1), respectively. These equilibrium constant values reflect the relative thermodynamic stability of the chromium(III) species-nucleophile complex. The low stabilising effect of the tetrameric species can be traced to its low thermodynamic affinity for nucleophiles.  相似文献   

17.
To examine mechanisms by which reduced type V collagen causes weakened connective tissues in the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS), we examined matrix deposition and collagen fibril morphology in long-term dermal fibroblast cultures. EDS cells with COL5A1 haplo-insufficiency deposited less than one-half of hydroxyproline as collagen compared to control fibroblasts, though total collagen synthesis rates are near-normal because type V collagen represents a small fraction of collagen synthesized. Cells from patients with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) and haplo-insufficiency for proalpha1(I) chains of type I collagen also incorporated about one-half the collagen as controls, but this amount was proportional to their reduced rates of total collagen synthesis. Collagen fibril diameter was inversely proportional to type V/type I collagen ratios (EDS > control > OI). However, a reduction of type V collagen, in the EDS derived cells, was associated with the assembly of significantly fewer fibrils compared to control and OI cells. These data indicate that in cell culture, the quantity of collagen fibrils deposited in matrix is highly sensitive to reduction in type V collagen, far out of proportion to type V collagen's contribution to collagen mass.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated regions of different helical stability within human type I collagen and discussed their role in intermolecular interactions and osteogenesis imperfecta (OI). By differential scanning calorimetry and circular dichroism, we measured and mapped changes in the collagen melting temperature (DeltaTm) for 41 different Gly substitutions from 47 OI patients. In contrast to peptides, we found no correlations of DeltaTm with the identity of the substituting residue. Instead, we observed regular variations in DeltaTm with the substitution location in different triple helix regions. To relate the DeltaTm map to peptide-based stability predictions, we extracted the activation energy of local helix unfolding (DeltaG) from the reported peptide data. We constructed the DeltaG map and tested it by measuring the H-D exchange rate for glycine NH residues involved in interchain hydrogen bonds. Based on the DeltaTm and DeltaG maps, we delineated regional variations in the collagen triple helix stability. Two large, flexible regions deduced from the DeltaTm map aligned with the regions important for collagen fibril assembly and ligand binding. One of these regions also aligned with a lethal region for Gly substitutions in the alpha1(I) chain.  相似文献   

19.
We previously suggested that keratinocyte releasable factors might modulate the wound healing process by regulating the expression of key extracellular matrix components such as collagenase (matrix metalloproteinase-1) and type I collagen in fibroblasts. The first one, we called it keratinocyte-derived anti-fibrogenic factor (KDAF), identified as stratifin (SFN) also named 14-3-3σ, revealing a strong collagenase activity. However, the second factor, which we named keratinocyte-derived collagen-inhibiting factor(s) (KD-CIF) that has shown to control the synthesis of type I collagen, was not known. Upon conducting a series of systematic protein purification methods followed by mass spectroscopy, two proteins: secreted protein acidic rich in cystein (SPARC) and SFN were identified in keratinocyte-conditioned media. Using co-immunoprecipitation and 3D modeling, we determined that SFN and SPARC form a complex thereby controlling the type I collagen synthesis and expression in fibroblasts. The levels of these proteins in fibrotic tissues (animal and human) were also evaluated and a differential expression of these proteins between normal and fibrotic tissue confirmed their potential role in development of fibrotic condition. In conclusion, this study describes for the first time an interaction between SPARC and SFN that may have implications for the regulation of matrix deposition and prevention of dermal fibrotic conditions such as hypertrophic scars and keloid.  相似文献   

20.
The oxidation of acid-soluble calf skin collagen type I caused by metal-dependent free radical generating systems, Fe(II)/H2O2 and Cu(II)/H2O2, was found to bring down in a specific, discrete way the collagen thermal stability, as determined by microcalorimetry and scanning densitometry. Initial oxidation results in splitting of the collagen denaturational transition into two components. Along with the endotherm at 41 degrees C typical for non-oxidized collagen, a second, similarly cooperative endotherm appears at 35 degrees C and increases in enthalpy with the oxidant concentration and exposure time, while the first peak correspondingly decreases. The two transitions at 35 and 41 degrees C were registered by densitometry as stepwise increases of the collagen-specific volume. Further oxidation results in massive collagen destruction manifested as abolishment of both denaturational transitions. The two oxidative systems used produce identical effects on the collagen stability but at higher concentrations of Cu(II) in comparison to Fe(II). The discrete reduction of the protein thermal stability is accompanied by a decrease of the free amino groups, suggestive of an oxidation attack of the side chains of lysine residues. Since the denaturation temperature of collagen shifts from above to below body temperature (41 degrees C-35 degrees C) upon oxidation, it appears important to account for this effect in a context of the possible physiological implications of collagen oxidation.  相似文献   

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