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1.
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   

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The collagen phenotype of a 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide-transformed line of Syrian hamster embryo fibroblasts, NQT-SHE, was markedly altered from that of normal Syrian hamster embryo cells, which synthesized mainly type I procollagen [pro-alpha 1(I)]2 pro-alpha 2(I). Total collagen synthesis in the transformant was reduced to about 30% of the control level primarily because synthesis of the pro-alpha 1(I) subunit was completely suppressed. The major collagenous products synthesized consisted of two polypeptides, designated as N-33 and N-50, which could be completely separated by precipitation with ammonium sulfate at 33 and 50% saturation, respectively. N-33 migrated similarly to pro-alpha 2(I) on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and N-50 migrated slightly more slowly. The collagenous regions of these chains were more sensitive to protease than the analogous region of procollagen I, but alpha-chains could be obtained by digestion for 2 h at 4 degrees C with high ratios of protein:pepsin. Staphylococcus V8 protease and cyanogen bromide peptide maps of N-33 alpha and N-50 alpha chains indicated that the chains were homologous with, but different than, alpha 2(I) chains and that they differed from each other. Considering their similarity to pro-alpha 2(I), it was surprising to find that the N-collagens were secreted to the same extent as was type I procollagen from Syrian hamster embryo cells and that there were no disulfide bonds between N-collagen chains. Intrachain disulfides were present. One possible explanation for the unusual collagen phenotype of NQT-SHE cells is that transformation induced one or more mutations in the pro-alpha 2(I) structural gene while suppression of synthesis of the pro-alpha 1(I) subunit may be due to a mutation in the regulatory region of its gene or in a general regulatory gene.  相似文献   

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We have determined the nucleotide sequence of a cDNA clone encoding the amino-terminal portion of human alpha 2(V) procollagen and found that the structure of the 186-residue amino-terminal propeptide closely resembles those of the fibril-forming procollagens. Juxtaposed to a 26-residue leader peptide, pro-alpha 2(V) exhibits a characteristic cysteine-rich globular region followed by 24 Gly-X-Y repeats which are interrupted by two short non-collagenous sequences. Upon closer examination, each of these two sequences was noted to display structural motifs characteristic of either pro-alpha 1(I) and pro-alpha 1(III) collagens or pro-alpha 1(II) collagen, respectively. Finally, within the amino-terminal telopeptide, a putative amino-terminal proteinase cleavage site, Ala-Gln, was identified. This latter finding strongly suggests that the alpha 2(V) amino-terminal propeptide can be potentially processed and thus leaves unresolved the issue pertaining to the nature of the collagenase-resistant sequence that is retained by mature type V collagen molecules.  相似文献   

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Syrian hamster embryo fibroblasts transformed by 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide (NQT-SHE cells) failed to synthesize the pro-alpha 1(I) subunit of type I procollagen but continued to synthesize altered forms of the other subunit, pro-alpha 2(I) (Peterkofsky, B., and Prather, W. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 16818-16826). This was unusual, since synthesis of the two subunits generally is coordinately regulated. Present experiments using cell-free translation and hybridization of RNA from normal and transformed Syrian hamster fibroblasts with labeled pro-alpha 1(I) DNA probes show that mRNA for pro-alpha 1(I) is absent from the transformant. In contrast, dot-blot and Southern blot hybridizations of cellular DNAs with pro-alpha 1(I) DNA probes demonstrated that the transformed cells contained pro-alpha 1(I) gene sequences and that the gross structure of the gene was unchanged by transformation. mRNA for the other type I procollagen subunit, pro-alpha 2(I), was present in transformed cells and the major collagenous polypeptide translated from this RNA migrated like the normal pro-alpha 2 subunit during sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The translated procollagen chain was cleaved to an alpha 2(I)-sized collagen chain by pepsin at 4 degrees C. These studies provide a molecular basis for the observed collagen phenotype of NQT-SHE cells.  相似文献   

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Transformed Syrian hamster embryo (NQT-SHE) fibroblasts do not synthesize the pro-alpha 1 subunit of type I procollagen, but secrete two modified forms of the pro-alpha 2(I) subunit that migrate more slowly than the normal chain during gel electrophoresis (Peterkofsky, B., and Prather, W. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 16818-16826). By electrophoretic analysis of cyanogen bromide and V8 protease-derived peptides from the collagenous domains of intra- and extracellular pro-alpha 2(I) chains, we find that the modification occurs almost exclusively in secreted molecules, is located in the region spanned by the cyanogen bromide peptide CB3,5, and persists when hydroxylation is inhibited. Thus, modification is due to a post-translational reaction other than hydroxylation. The modified chains appear to be secreted in the denatured state since: 1) helical structures formed at 4 degrees C under acidic conditions were unstable under neutral conditions at 37 degrees C; 2) conditions that destabilize the type I procollagen helix and thus inhibit its secretion, i.e. inhibition of proline hydroxylation or incorporation of the proline analog cis-hydroxyproline, did not affect secretion of the modified chains. The time courses for secretion of nonhelical modified chains from NQT-SHE and of hydroxylated helical procollagen I from control cells, as a proportion of total collagen synthesized, were similar. Although cis-hydroxyproline did not inhibit the secretion of the modified chains, it induced their rapid intracellular degradation.  相似文献   

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A full length cDNA encoding human pro-alpha 2(V) collagen was constructed. Partial sequencing of the cDNA and primer extension analysis of mRNA from fibroblasts found that pro-alpha 2(V) mRNA differs from the mRNAs of other fibrillar collagens in the increased length of its 5'-untranslated region. The pro-alpha 2(V) cDNA was placed downstream of the human cytomegalovirus immediate early promoter/regulatory sequences for expression studies in cultured Chinese hamster lung cells. These cells have been shown previously to synthesize large quantities of pro-alpha 1(V) homotrimers as their only collagenous product. Transfection resulted in a number of clonal cell lines that express human alpha 2(V) RNA at levels comparable to, and in some cases greater than, levels found in normal human skin fibroblasts. Pro-alpha 2(V) chains produced in the majority of clonal lines were of sufficient quantity to complex all available endogenous pro-alpha 1(V) chains. Chimeric heterotrimers, composed of hamster alpha 1(V) and human alpha 2(V) chains in a 2:1 ratio, were stable to pepsin digestion and were found predominantly associated with the cell layer. Surprisingly, pro-alpha 2(V) chains, in excess to pro-alpha 1(V) chains, were found in the extracellular matrix and, in much greater abundance, in media. These chains were pepsin sensitive, indicating that pro-alpha 2(V) chains can be secreted as nonstable homotrimers or as free chains.  相似文献   

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Synthesis of procollagen was examined in skin fibroblasts from a patient with a moderately severe autosomal dominant form of osteogenesis imperfecta. Proteolytic removal of the propeptide regions of newly synthesized procollagen, followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions, revealed the presence of type I collagen in which two alpha 1(I) chains were linked through interchain disulfide bonds. Fragmentation of the disulfide-bonded alpha 1(I) dimers with vertebrate collagenase and cyanogen bromide demonstrated the presence of a cysteine residue in alpha 1(I)CB8, a fragment containing amino acid residues 124-402 of the alpha 1(I) collagen chain. Cysteine residues are not normally found in the triple-helical domain of type I collagen chains. The heterozygous nature of the molecular defect resulted in the formation of three kinds of type I trimers: a normal type with normal pro-alpha(I) chains, a type I trimer with one mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chain and two normal chains, and a type I trimer containing two mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chains and one normal pro-alpha 2(I) chain. The presence of one or two mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chains in trimers of type I procollagen was found to reduce the thermal stability of the protein by 2.5 and 1 degree C, respectively. In addition to post-translational overmodification, procollagen containing one mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chain was also cleared more slowly from cultured fibroblasts. The most likely explanation for these disruptive changes in the physical stability and secretion of the mutant procollagen is that a cysteine residue is substituted for a glycine in half of the pro-alpha 1(I) chains synthesized by the patient's fibroblasts.  相似文献   

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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
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A child with the type VII form of the Ehlers-Danlos syndrome was shown to have a structural defect in the amino terminus of the pro-alpha 1(I) chain of type I procollagen. Normal and mutant amino-terminal cyanogen bromide peptides (pN-alpha 1(I) CB0,1 peptides) were purified from the medium of the patient's cultured fibroblasts. Amino acid sequencing of tryptic peptides derived from the mutant pN-alpha 1(I) CB0,1 peptide showed that an expected sequence of 24 amino acids (positions 136-159 of the normal pN-alpha 1(I) CB0,1 peptide) was deleted. The segment deleted from the mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chain contains the small globular region of the NH2-propeptide, the procollagen N-proteinase cleavage site, the NH2-telopeptide, and first triplet of the helix of the alpha I(I) collagen chain (Chu, M.-L., de Wet, W., Bernard, M., Ding, J.F., Morabito, M., Myers, J., Williams, C., and Ramirez, F. (1984) Nature 310, 337-340). Loss of the procollagen N-proteinase cleavage site from the mutant pro-alpha 1(I) chain accounted for the persistence of its NH2-propeptide despite normal production of the N-proteinase by cultured mutant fibroblasts. Collagen production by mutant fibroblasts was doubled possibly due to reduced feedback inhibition by the NH2-propeptides. The child appeared to be heterozygous for the peptide deletion and, as the parents did not show any evidence of the deletion, it is likely that the child had a new mutation of one allele of the pro-alpha 1(I) gene. The deleted peptide corresponds precisely to the sequence coded by exon 46 of the normal pro-alpha 1(I) gene (Chu, M.-L., de Wet, W., Bernard, M., Ding, J.F., Morabito, M., Myers, J., Williams, C., and Ramirez, F. (1984) Nature 310, 337-340).  相似文献   

18.
Homologous DNA fragments were prepared from cloned cDNAs for the pro-alpha 1(I) and pro-alpha 2(I) chains of human type I procollagen. The DNA fragments were then used to develop a dot blot hybridization assay for mRNAs for pro-alpha 1(I) and pro-alpha 2(I) chains in skin fibroblasts. In normal fibroblasts, the ratio of the steady state levels of the two mRNAs was 1.94 +/- 0.34 S.D. The ratio for the rates of synthesis of the two pro-alpha chains in the same cells was 1.84 +/- 0.13 S.D. Since the two ratios were essentially the same, the results indicated that the mRNAs for the two chains are translated at about the same rates. Therefore, there is no need to invoke translational control or more complex mechanisms to explain synthesis of pro-alpha 1(I) and pro-alpha 2(I) chains in a stoichiometry of 2:1. The dot blot hybridization assay was also used to examine the levels of the mRNAs in fibroblasts from several variants of osteogenesis imperfecta. In two of the variants, the ratios of the steady state levels of mRNAs for pro-alpha 1(I) and pro-alpha 2(I) chains were 3.05 and 2.52, respectively. In the same fibroblasts, the ratios for the rates of synthesis of the two chains were 2.99 +/- 0.43 and 2.45 +/- 0.16, respectively. Therefore, even though the ratios of the levels of the two mRNAs in the fibroblasts were abnormal, the two mRNAs were still translated at the same rates, and there was no evidence of differential regulation at the translational level.  相似文献   

19.
Synthesis of type I procollagen was examined in skin fibroblasts from a proband with a lethal variant of osteogenesis imperfecta. The fibroblasts synthesized shortened pro-alpha 2(I) chains and these shortened chains accounted for all the pro-alpha 2(I) chains synthesized by the cells. In addition, there was a decrease in the relative rate of synthesis of pro-alpha 2(I) chains. Fragmentation of the shortened pro-alpha 2(I) chains with vertebrate collagenase and cyanogen bromide demonstrated that the shortening was in alpha 2(I)-CB3,5A, a fragment from about the middle of the chain containing amino acid residues 361 to 775. Based on the relative mobility in electrophoretic gels, the shortening was about 20 amino acid residues. The decreased synthesis of pro-alpha 2(I) chains was demonstrated by an increase in the ratio for the rates of synthesis of pro-alpha 1(I):pro-alpha 2(I) chains. It was associated with an increase in the ratio of mRNAs for pro-alpha 1(I):pro-alpha 2(I) in the cells. Fibroblasts from the father also demonstrated a decreased synthesis of pro-alpha 2(I) chains as reflected by an increase in the ratio of newly synthesized pro-alpha 1(I):pro-alpha 2(I) chains. No shortened pro-alpha 2(I) chains were seen in fibroblasts from either the father or the mother. The observations suggested that the proband inherited a nonfunctioning pro-alpha 2(I) gene from her father and that the gene for the shortened pro-alpha 2(I) chain probably arose from a sporadic mutation.  相似文献   

20.
We have previously shown that type I procollagen pro-alpha1(I) chains from an osteogenesis imperfecta patient (OI26) with a frameshift mutation resulting in a truncated C-propeptide, have impaired assembly, and are degraded by an endoplasmic reticulum-associated pathway (Lamandé, S. R., Chessler, S. D., Golub, S. B., Byers, P. H., Chan, D., Cole, W. G., Sillence, D. O. and Bateman, J. F. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 8642-8649). To further explore the degradation of procollagen chains with mutant C-propeptides, mouse Mov13 cells, which produce no endogenous pro-alpha1(I), were stably transfected with a pro-alpha1(I) expression construct containing a frameshift mutation that predicts the synthesis of a protein 85 residues longer than normal. Despite high levels of mutant mRNA in transfected Mov13 cells, only minute amounts of mutant pro-alpha1(I) could be detected indicating that the majority of the mutant pro-alpha1(I) chains synthesized are targeted for rapid intracellular degradation. Degradation was not prevented by brefeldin A, monensin, or NH(4)Cl, agents that interfere with intracellular transport or lysosomal function. However, mutant pro-alpha1(I) chains in both transfected Mov13 cells and OI26 cells were protected from proteolysis by specific proteasome inhibitors. Together these data demonstrate for the first time that procollagen chains containing C-propeptide mutations that impair assembly are degraded by the cytoplasmic proteasome complex, and that the previously identified endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation of mutant pro-alpha1(I) in OI26 is mediated by proteasomes.  相似文献   

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