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1.
Decorin binds near the C terminus of type I collagen   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Decorin belongs to a family of small leucine-rich proteoglycans that are directly involved in the control of matrix organization and cell growth. Genetic evidence indicates that decorin is required for the proper assembly of collagenous matrices. Here, we sought to establish the precise binding site of decorin on type I collagen. Using rotary shadowing electron microscopy and photoaffinity labeling, we mapped the binding site of decorin protein core to a narrow region near the C terminus of type I collagen. This region is located within the cyanogen bromide peptide fragment alpha1(I) CB6 and is approximately 25 nm from the C terminus, in a zone that coincides with the c(1) band of the collagen fibril d-period. This location is very close to one of the major intermolecular cross-linking sites of collagen heterotrimers. Thus, decorin protein core possesses a unique binding specificity that could potentially regulate collagen fibril stability.  相似文献   

2.
A major site of pyridinoline cross-linking in bovine type IX collagen was traced to a tryptic peptide derived from one of the molecule's HMW chains. This peptide gave two amino acid sequences (in 2/1 ratio) consistent with it being a three-chained structure. The major sequence matched exactly that of the C-telopeptide of type II collagen from the same tissue. A second HMW chain that contained pyridinoline cross-links also gave two amino-terminal sequences, one from its own amino terminus, the other matching exactly the N-telopeptide cross-linking sequence of type II collagen. We conclude that type IX collagen molecules are covalently cross-linked in cartilage to molecules of type II collagen, probably at fibril surfaces.  相似文献   

3.
From a study to understand the mechanism of covalent interaction between collagen types II and IX, we present experimental evidence for a previously unrecognized molecular site of cross-linking. The location relative to previously defined cross-linking sites predicts a specific manner of interaction and folding of collagen IX on the surface of nascent collagen II fibrils. The initial evidence came from Western blot analysis of type IX collagen extracted by pepsin from fetal human cartilage, which showed a molecular species that had properties indicating an adduct between the alpha1(II) chain and the C-terminal domain (COL1) of type IX collagen. A similar component was isolated from bovine cartilage in sufficient quantity to confirm this identity by N-terminal sequence analysis. Using an antibody that recognized the putative cross-linking sequence at the C terminus of the alpha1(IX) chain, cross-linked peptides were isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography from proteolytic digests of human cartilage collagen. They were characterized by immunochemistry, N-terminal sequence analysis, and mass spectrometry. The results establish a link between a lysine near the C terminus (in the NC1 domain) of alpha1(IX) and the known cross-linking lysine at residue 930 of the alpha1(II) triple helix. This cross-link is speculated to form early in the process of interaction between collagen IX molecules and collagen II polymers. A model of molecular folding and further cross-linking is predicted that can spatially accommodate the formation of all six known cross-linking interactions to the collagen IX molecule on a fibril surface. Of particular biological significance, this model can accommodate potential interfibrillar as well as intrafibrillar links between the collagen IX molecules themselves, so providing a mechanism whereby collagen IX could stabilize a collagen fibril network.  相似文献   

4.
Type IX collagen functions in covalent cross-linkage to type II collagen in cartilage (Eyre, D. R., Apone, S., Wu, J. J., Ericsson, L. H., and Walsh, K. A. (1987) FEBS Lett. 220, 337-341). To understand this molecular relationship better, an analysis of all cross-linking sites labeled by [3H]borohydride was undertaken using the protein prepared from fetal bovine cartilage. Sequence analysis of tryptic peptides containing the 3H-labeled cross-links showed that each of the chains of type IX collagen, alpha 1(IX), alpha 2(IX), and alpha 3(IX), contained a site of cross-linking at the amino terminus of the COL2 triple-helix to which the alpha 1(II)N-telopeptide could bond. The alpha 3(IX)COL2 domain alone also had an attachment site for the alpha 1(II)C-telopeptide. The distance between the alpha 1(II)N-telopeptide and alpha 1(II)C-telopeptide interaction sites, 137 residues, is equal to the length of the hole zone (0.6D) in a type II collagen fibril. This implies an antiparallel type II to type IX cross-linking relationship. Peptide analysis also revealed an unknown amino acid sequence linked to the COL2 cross-linking domains in both the alpha 1(IX) and alpha 3(IX) chains. Using antibodies to this novel peptide, its origin in the collagen alpha 3(IX)NC1 domain was established. In summary, the results confirm extensive covalent cross-linking between type IX and type II collagen molecules and reveal the existence of type IX-type IX bonding. These data provide a molecular basis for the proposed function of type IX collagen as a critical contributor to the mechanical stability and resistance to swelling of the collagen type II fibril framework of cartilage.  相似文献   

5.
The hallmark of fibrotic disorders is a highly cross-linked and dense collagen matrix, a property driven by the oxidative action of lysyl oxidase. Other fibrosis-associated proteins also contribute to the final collagen matrix properties, one of which is fibromodulin. Its interactions with collagen affect collagen cross-linking, packing, and fibril diameter. We investigated the possibility that a specific relationship exists between fibromodulin and lysyl oxidase, potentially imparting a specific collagen matrix phenotype. We mapped the fibromodulin-collagen interaction sites using the collagen II and III Toolkit peptide libraries. Fibromodulin interacted with the peptides containing the known collagen cross-linking sites and the MMP-1 cleavage site in collagens I and II. Interestingly, the interaction sites are closely aligned within the quarter-staggered collagen fibril, suggesting a multivalent interaction between fibromodulin and several collagen helices. Furthermore, we detected an interaction between fibromodulin and lysyl oxidase (a major collagen cross-linking enzyme) and mapped the interaction site to 12 N-terminal amino acids on fibromodulin. This interaction also increases the activity of lysyl oxidase. Together, the data suggest a fibromodulin-modulated collagen cross-linking mechanism where fibromodulin binds to a specific part of the collagen domain and also forms a complex with lysyl oxidase, targeting the enzyme toward specific cross-linking sites.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Exposure to formaldehyde brings about small but readily detectable changes in the staining behaviour of collagen fibrils. These changes can be interpreted in chemical terms by comparing fibril staining patterns with artificial patterns computer-generated from sequence data. Positive staining with phosphotung-state (where heavy metal is confined to anions), shows that most of the lysyl and hydroxylysyl side-chains lose their charge character as a result of formaldehyde treatment and cease to take up staining ions. The charge character of arginyl (and probably histidyl) residues is unaltered and these residues continue to react with stain. Acidic residues are also unaffected. These results accord with biochemical evidence that the initial reaction between proteins and formaldehyde leading to subsequent cross-linking involves modification of ε-amino (and α-amino) groups. They show too that the secondary condensation producing the actual cross-link does not alter the charge character of the second group, at least when it is on an arginyl (or histidyl) side-chain.Formaldehyde-induced changes in stain deposition can also be detected after negative staining, although they are slight compared with those brought about by glutaraldehyde. Unlike glutaraldehyde, formaldehyde introduces no bulky polymeric adducts into the fibril structure, and the conspicuous stain-excluding bands seen in negative staining patterns following glutaraldehyde fixation are absent after exposure to formaldehyde. For this reason, where chemical fixation is used to stabilize macromolecules and supramolecular aggregates prior to negative staining and high resolution electron optical imaging, formaldehyde would seem to be preferable to glutaraldehyde. Data from fibril staining patterns and from thermal stability measurements (made on collagen gels) show that formaldehyde fixation does not preclude a subsequent reaction with glutaraldehyde.As with other fixatives, there is reduced accessibility to stain after formaldehyde treatment. Accessibility is least in the overlap zone where the denser packing of collagen molecules provides greater opportunities for intermolecular cross-linking. Gel electrophoresis confirms that formaldehyde-induced cross-links in fibrils are predominantly intermolecular.  相似文献   

8.
The intermolecular space of reconstituted collagen fibrils   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The extent, geometry and heterogeneity of the intermolecular space of hydrated, purified and reconstituted steer skin collagen fibrils has been characterized. The extent of the space has been assessed experimentally by an X-ray diffraction method and a new physical chemical technique, and found to be 1.14 ml per gram collagen. A theoretical model relating the intermolecular space to X-ray diffraction parameters has been presented, and this suggests that the geometry of the intermolecular space arises from a near-hexagonal packing of the collagen molecules. On the basis of an assumed microfibrillar packing model and a geometric construction of the shape of a collagen molecule, the distribution of the space within reconstituted collagen fibrils has been characterized as follows: 0.13 ml of the intermolecular space/g collagen can be attributed to the helical groove of the collagen molecules per se and 1.01 ml/g is interstitial; 0.66 ml/g is present in the form of “pores” (hexagonally-closed packed spaces), whereas 0.48 ml/g is present in the form of “holes” (hexagonal volume defects); 0.73 ml/g of the intermolecular space is associated with a region of the collagen fibrils where holes are localized and 0.41 ml/g is attributable to the regions of the fibril in which pores only are present.  相似文献   

9.
The amino-terminal telopeptide of the collagen α1(I) chain has a highly conserved sequence. This sequence was analyzed by the Chou-Fasman criteria, and a folded β-sheet conformation, including a β-turn, was predicted. This folded “hairpin” region favors both ionic and hydrophobic intermolecular interactions with α1(I) chain residues 930–938 on a neighboring, end-overlapped molecule. An end-overlap interaction of this nature could direct the initial step in fibril formation. The predicted structure also places the potential crosslink-forming lysyl residue, 9N, in a unique site at the β-turn end of the telopeptide.  相似文献   

10.
Eleven collagen peptide sequences recovered from chemical extracts of dinosaur bones were mapped onto molecular models of the vertebrate collagen fibril derived from extant taxa. The dinosaur peptides localized to fibril regions protected by the close packing of collagen molecules, and contained few acidic amino acids. Four peptides mapped to collagen regions crucial for cell-collagen interactions and tissue development. Dinosaur peptides were not represented in more exposed parts of the collagen fibril or regions mediating intermolecular cross-linking. Thus functionally significant regions of collagen fibrils that are physically shielded within the fibril may be preferentially preserved in fossils. These results show empirically that structure-function relationships at the molecular level could contribute to selective preservation in fossilized vertebrate remains across geological time, suggest a 'preservation motif', and bolster current concepts linking collagen structure to biological function. This non-random distribution supports the hypothesis that the peptides are produced by the extinct organisms and suggests a chemical mechanism for survival.  相似文献   

11.
Fibroblasts organize the modular cell-adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin into a highly structured pericellular matrix by poorly understood mechanisms. Previous studies implicated an amino-terminal domain in matrix assembly and suggested that fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and the corresponding fibroblast receptor were not involved in this process. To further elucidate the fibronectin region(s) involved in matrix assembly, we mapped a library of proteolytic fragments and antibodies to various fibronectin domains. The fragments and antibodies were used to probe the role of fibronectin's amino-terminal and cell-adhesive domains in a fibroblast matrix assembly assay. We found that fibronectin fragments including the first 25-kDa sequence of fibronectin and antibodies to amino-terminal domains inhibited pericellular matrix assembly. Polyclonal antibodies to the 40-kDa collagen binding domain following the 25-kDa amino-terminal domain also inhibited matrix assembly. However, collagen binding is not required for matrix assembly as neither monoclonals blocking collagen binding nor purified collagen binding domains themselves inhibited matrix assembly. Therefore, the amino-terminal region of fibronectin contains a site important in matrix assembly, and most activity is present in the first 25-kDa of fibronectin. Fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and the fibroblast receptor binding to this domain also play an important role in fibronectin matrix assembly. Apart from a monoclonal antibody to the amino-terminal domain, only monoclonal antibodies binding to fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and inhibiting cell adhesion also inhibited matrix assembly. In addition a 105-kDa fragment containing the cell-adhesive domain inhibited matrix assembly. We conclude that at least two discrete and widely separated sites in fibronectin with different binding properties--the carboxyl-terminal fibroblast cell-adhesive domain and an amino-terminal matrix assembly domain localized primarily within the first 25 kDa--are required for fibronectin pericellular matrix assembly by fibroblasts. Fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and its cell surface-receptor complex appear to be involved in the matrix assembly process prior to a step involving the amino-terminal domain. We believe that this step is likely to be the initiation of cell-associated fibronectin fibril formation by the fibronectin-adhesive-receptor complex.  相似文献   

12.
The mineral in bone is located primarily within the collagen fibril, and during mineralization the fibril is formed first and then water within the fibril is replaced with mineral. The collagen fibril therefore provides the aqueous compartment in which mineral grows. Although knowledge of the size of molecules that can diffuse into the fibril to affect crystal growth is critical to understanding the mechanism of bone mineralization, there have been as yet no studies on the size exclusion properties of the collagen fibril. To determine the size exclusion characteristics of collagen, we developed a gel filtration-like procedure that uses columns containing collagen from tendon and bone. The elution volumes of test molecules show the volume within the packed column that is accessible to the test molecules, and therefore reveal the size exclusion characteristics of the collagen within the column. These experiments show that molecules smaller than a 6-kDa protein diffuse into all of the water within the collagen fibril, whereas molecules larger than a 40-kDa protein are excluded from this water. These studies provide an insight into the mechanism of bone mineralization. Molecules and apatite crystals smaller than a 6-kDa protein can diffuse into all water within the fibril and so can directly impact mineralization. Although molecules larger than a 40-kDa protein are excluded from the fibril, they can initiate mineralization by forming small apatite crystal nuclei that diffuse into the fibril, or can favor fibril mineralization by inhibiting apatite growth everywhere but within the fibril.  相似文献   

13.
Rat tail tendon was stained with a cationic phthalocyanin dye, Cupromeronic Blue, in a 'critical-electrolyte-concentration' method [Scott (1980) Biochem. J. 187, 887-891] specifically to demonstrate proteoglycan by electron microscopy. Hyaluronidase digestion in the presence of proteinase inhibitors corroborated the results. Collagen was stained with uranyl acetate and/or phosphotungstic acid to demonstrate the banding pattern a-e in the D period. Proteoglycan was distributed about the collagen fibrils in an orthogonal array, the transverse elements of which were located almost exclusively at the d band, in the gap zone. The proteoglycan may inhibit (1) fibril radial growth by accretion of collagen molecules or fibril fusion, through interference with cross-linking, and (2) calcification by occupying the holes in the gap region later to be filled with hydroxyapatite.  相似文献   

14.
The extracellular matrix (ECM) undergoes progressive age-related stiffening and loss of proteolytic digestibility due to an increase in concentration of advanced glycation end products (AGEs). The most abundant AGE, glucosepane, accumulates in collagen with concentrations over 100 times greater than all other AGEs. Detrimental collagen stiffening properties are believed to play a significant role in several age-related diseases such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. Currently little is known of the potential location of covalently cross-linked glucosepane formation within collagen molecules; neither are there reports on how the respective cross-link sites affect the physical and biochemical properties of collagen. Using fully atomistic molecular dynamics simulations (MD) we have identified six sites where the formation of a covalent intra-molecular glucosepane cross-link within a single collagen molecule in a fibrillar environment is energetically favourable. Identification of these favourable sites enables us to align collagen cross-linking with experimentally observed changes to the ECM. For example, formation of glucosepane was found to be energetically favourable within close proximity of the Matrix Metalloproteinase-1 (MMP1) binding site, which could potentially disrupt collagen degradation.  相似文献   

15.
Type I collagen, the predominant protein of vertebrates, polymerizes with type III and V collagens and non-collagenous molecules into large cable-like fibrils, yet how the fibril interacts with cells and other binding partners remains poorly understood. To help reveal insights into the collagen structure-function relationship, a data base was assembled including hundreds of type I collagen ligand binding sites and mutations on a two-dimensional model of the fibril. Visual examination of the distribution of functional sites, and statistical analysis of mutation distributions on the fibril suggest it is organized into two domains. The "cell interaction domain" is proposed to regulate dynamic aspects of collagen biology, including integrin-mediated cell interactions and fibril remodeling. The "matrix interaction domain" may assume a structural role, mediating collagen cross-linking, proteoglycan interactions, and tissue mineralization. Molecular modeling was used to superimpose the positions of functional sites and mutations from the two-dimensional fibril map onto a three-dimensional x-ray diffraction structure of the collagen microfibril in situ, indicating the existence of domains in the native fibril. Sequence searches revealed that major fibril domain elements are conserved in type I collagens through evolution and in the type II/XI collagen fibril predominant in cartilage. Moreover, the fibril domain model provides potential insights into the genotype-phenotype relationship for several classes of human connective tissue diseases, mechanisms of integrin clustering by fibrils, the polarity of fibril assembly, heterotypic fibril function, and connective tissue pathology in diabetes and aging.  相似文献   

16.
An electron microscope study of collagen fibrils from fixed tail tendons of rats has revealed that from some time shortly after birth until maturity, the fibril diameters have a bimodal distribution. The “two” types of fibril are indistinguishable in both transverse and longitudinal section. Unfixed specimens of eight-week-old-tail tendon showed a similar bimodal distribution of diameters though the positions of the peak values compared to fixed specimens of an eight-week-old-tail tendon were shifted upwards by about 30%. It has also been shown quantitatively that the polar collagen fibrils are directed randomly “up” and “down” with respect to their neighbors. Whilst it has been suggested by others that anastomosis is a feature of collagen structure, the results presented here do not support this hypothesis. Fibrillar units ~ 140 Å in diameter have been observed and the possibilities that these are elastic fibers or the breakdown products of collagen fibrils have been considered.  相似文献   

17.
Type I collagen is an essential extracellular protein that plays an important structural role in tissues that require high tensile strength. However, owing to the molecule’s size, to date no experimental structural data are available for the Homo sapiens species. Therefore, there is a real need to develop a reliable homology model and a method to study the packing of the collagen molecules within the fibril. Through the use of the homology model and implementation of a novel simulation technique, we have ascertained the orientations of the collagen molecules within a fibril, which is currently below the resolution limit of experimental techniques. The longitudinal orientation of collagen molecules within a fibril has a significant effect on the mechanical and biological properties of the fibril, owing to the different amino acid side chains available at the interface between the molecules.  相似文献   

18.
We have determined the nucleotide sequence of several overlapping cDNA clones encoding the amino-terminal portion of human alpha 1(XI) procollagen. These experiments have revealed that this domain of the pro-alpha(XI) chain displays structural features common to other fibrillar procollagen molecules, such as a putative amino-terminal proteinase cleavage site and an interrupted collagenous segment. In the latter, structural similarities were noted when alpha 1(XI) was compared with alpha 1(II) and alpha 2(V) procollagens. Overall, however, the amino-terminal region of pro-alpha 1(XI) differs greatly in composition and size from that of other fibrillar chains. Nearly three-fourths of this domain is in fact composed of a 383-amino acid globular region in which a 3-cysteine cluster signals the transition to a long and highly acidic carboxyl-terminal segment. Finally, the unrestricted expression of this cartilage-specific collagen gene has been confirmed by the finding of high levels of pro-alpha 1(XI) mRNA in two human rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines.  相似文献   

19.
A Fourier analysis of the distributions of different types of amino acids in the sequence of tropomyosin shows strong 14th-order peaks in the profiles of both negatively charged and non-polar amino acids, with a period of 1923 residues and an overall repeat length of 275 ± 2 amino acids, which is shorter than the sequence length of 284 amino acids. Both peaks are statistically significant and confirm Parry's work (1974, 1975b). The regularities are analysed in terms of an assumed supercoil structure in which two α-helices lie parallel and in register to form a supercoil with a pitch of 137 Å. These molecules are then assumed to overlap end-to-end by eight to nine amino acids so that the periodicity is continuous along an extended filament of linked tropomyosin molecules. The periodic features are stronger in the outer surface of the molecule away from the core of the supercoil. The sequence divides into 14 bands which each have a narrow zone of net positive charge and a broader negatively charged zone. Overlapping every positive zone is a hydrophobic zone which always has at least one non-polar group on the outer surface. Anomalies in the charge distribution are found near the molecular ends and close to Cys190. These are attributed to the end-to-end overlap site and the troponin binding site.In the thin filament the 137 Å pitch supercoil would make seven half-twists relative to the twisted actin helix along a 385 Å length, so that a pair of adjacent bands would be oriented equivalently with respect to a pair of actins 28 Å apart. We therefore suggest that the bands (each containing one zone of each type) should be divided alternately into two series, α and β. Every pair of bands is 3913 residues long and each of the seven pairs corresponds with one segment of the 42-residue gene duplication repeat observed previously in the sequence. The disparity between the periods of 42 and 3913 is overcome by deletions and insertions. The 3913-residue periodicity is not simply a consequence of the supercoil structure or gene duplication but is probably a result of adaptation to the spatial periodicity of the actin helix in muscle. Although the α and β bands are alike in general, they differ systematically in detail and the α bands are more regular than the β.We propose that the seven α and seven β bands are alternative sets of sites which bind equivalently to complementary groups of sites on seven actins in the “relaxed” and “active” states of muscle, respectively. In each band the negative zone probably attaches to actin by magnesium bridges and the hydrophobic zone by direct contacts with the narrow outer edge of the supercoil. Since the supercoil twists 90 ° relative to actin on passing between adjacent α and β bands, a quarter rotation of the whole tropomyosin molecule would detach one set of seven sites and attach the other, allowing a highly co-operative switch mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,125(5):1179-1188
The glycosaminoglycan chains of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans are believed to regulate cell adhesion, proliferation, and extracellular matrix assembly, through their interactions with heparin-binding proteins (for review see Ruoslahti, E. 1988. Annu. Rev. Cell Biol. 4:229-255; and Bernfield, M., R. Kokenyesi, M. Kato, M. T. Hinkes, J. Spring, R. L. Gallo, and E. J. Lose. 1992. Annu. Rev. Cell Biol. 8:365-393). Heparin-binding sites on many extracellular matrix proteins have been described; however, the heparin-binding site on type I collagen, a ubiquitous heparin-binding protein of the extracellular matrix, remains undescribed. Here we used heparin, a structural and functional analogue of heparan sulfate, as a probe to study the nature of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan-binding site on type I collagen. We used affinity coelectrophoresis to study the binding of heparin to various forms of type I collagen, and electron microscopy to visualize the site(s) of interaction of heparin with type I collagen monomers and fibrils. Using affinity coelectrophoresis it was found that heparin has similar affinities for both procollagen and collagen fibrils (Kd's approximately 60-80 nM), suggesting that functionally similar heparin- binding sites exist in type I collagen independent of its aggregation state. Complexes of heparin-albumin-gold particles and procollagen were visualized by rotary shadowing and electron microscopy, and a preferred site of heparin binding was observed near the NH2 terminus of procollagen. Native or reconstituted type I collagen fibrils showed one region of significant heparin-gold binding within each 67-nm period, present near the division between the overlap and gap zones, within the "a" bands region. According to an accepted model of collagen fibril structure, our data are consistent with the presence of a single preferred heparin-binding site near the NH2 terminus of the collagen monomer. Correlating these data with known type I collagen sequences, we suggest that the heparin-binding site in type I collagen may consist of a highly basic triple helical domain, including several amino acids known sometimes to function as disaccharide acceptor sites. We propose that the heparin-binding site of type I collagen may play a key role in cell adhesion and migration within connective tissues, or in the cell- directed assembly or restructuring of the collagenous extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

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