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1.
Complete primary structure of human collagen alpha 1 (V) chain   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Several cDNA clones, encoding prepropeptide of human collagen alpha 1(V) chain, have been isolated. The prepropeptide (1838 amino acids length) of the alpha 1(V) chain was composed of a putative signal peptide, a large NH2-terminal noncollagenous region, a main collagenous region, and a COOH-terminal noncollagenous region. The signal peptide contained many leucine residues. The NH2-terminal noncollagenous region was much larger than those of the other collagens and had a region homologous to the COOH-terminal domain of laminin A chain, but it did not contain a cysteine-rich region that was maintained in the region of the other collagens. This region also contained probable tyrosine sulfation sites, and short collagenous sequences that were interrupted by three noncollagenous segments. The main collagenous region of the alpha 1(V) chain consisted of 338 repeats of Gly-X-Y-triplet. This region had a high degree (82%) of homology with the amino acids of the collagen alpha 1(XI) chain. The COOH-terminal noncollagenous region resembled that of the alpha 1(XI) chain, too, and 8 residues of cysteine that were important for the formation of the triple helix structure of collagens were observed. These results suggest that the alpha 1(V) chain belongs to the fibrillar collagen relative to the alpha 1(XI) chain, but codon usage of the alpha 1(V) cDNA was clearly different from those of the other fibrillar collagens including the alpha 1(XI), while it was similar to type IV collagen. This result supposes a different evolution of the alpha 1(V) gene from those of the other fibrillar collagens.  相似文献   

2.
Molecular mechanisms controlling the assembly of cartilage-specific types II, IX and XI collagens into a heteropolymeric network of uniformly thin, unbanded fibrils are not well understood, but collagen XI has been implicated. The present study on cartilage from the homozygous chondrodysplasia (cho/cho) mouse adds support to this concept. In the absence of alpha1(XI) collagen chains, thick, banded collagen fibrils are formed in the extracellular matrix of cho/cho cartilage. A functional knock-out of the type XI collagen molecule has been assumed. We have re-examined this at the protein level to see if, rather than a complete knock-out, alternative type XI chain assemblies were formed. Mass spectrometry of purified triple-helical collagen from the rib cartilage of cho/cho mice identified alpha1(V) and alpha2(XI) chains. These chains were recovered in roughly equal amounts based on Coomassie Blue staining of SDS-PAGE gels, in addition to alpha1(II)/alpha3(XI) collagen chains. Using telopeptide-specific antibodies and Western blot analysis, it was further shown that type V/XI trimers were present in the matrix cross-linked to each other and to type II collagen molecules to form heteropolymers. Cartilage from heterozygous (cho/+) mice contained a mix of alpha1(V) and alpha1(XI) chains and a mix of thin and thick fibrils on transmission electron microscopy. In summary, the results imply that native type XI collagen molecules containing an alpha1(XI) chain are required to form uniformly thin fibrils and support a role for type XI collagen as the template for the characteristic type II collagen fibril network of developing cartilage.  相似文献   

3.
The thermal triple helix to coil transitions of two human type V collagens (alpha 1(2) alpha 2 and alpha 1 alpha 2 alpha 3) and bovine type XI collagen differ from those of the interstitial collagens type I, II, and III by the presence of unfolding intermediates. The total transition enthalpy of these collagens is comparable to the transition enthalpy of the interstitial collagens with values of 17.9 kJ/mol tripeptide units for type XI collagen, 22.9 kJ/mol for type V (alpha 1(2) alpha 2), and 18.5 kJ/mol for type V (alpha 1 alpha 2 alpha 3). It is shown by optical rotatory dispersion and differential scanning calorimetry that complex transition curves with stable intermediates exist. Type XI collagen has two main transitions at 38.5 and 41.5 degrees C and a smaller transition at 40.1 degrees C. Type V (alpha 1(2) alpha 2) shows two main transitions at 38.2 and 42.9 degrees C and two smaller transitions at 40.1 and 41.3 degrees C. Compared to these two collagens type V (alpha 1 alpha 2 alpha 3) unfolds at a lower temperature with two main transitions at 36.4 and 38.1 degrees C and two minor transitions at 40.5 and 42.9 degrees C. The intermediates present at different temperatures are characterized by resistance to trypsin digestion, length measurements of the resistant fragments after rotary shadowing, and amino-terminal sequencing. One of the intermediate peptides has been identified as belonging to the alpha 2 type V chain, starting at position 430 and being about 380 residues long. (The residue numbering begins with the first residue of the first amino-terminal tripeptide unit of the main triple helix. The alpha 2(XI) chain was assumed to be the same length as the alpha 1(XI). One intermediate was identified from the alpha 2(XI) chain and with starting position at residue 495, and three from the alpha 3(XI) with starting positions at residues 519, 585, and 618.  相似文献   

4.
We have isolated a partial cDNA for alpha 1(XI) collagen from a bovine smooth muscle cell (SMC) library. Previously, this collagen was not known to be expressed in SMCs. Comparison of the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequence of the 2.7-kilobase bovine clone and the human alpha 1(XI) sequence indicates 92 and 98% homology, respectively. Bovine SMCs in culture were found to produce alpha 1(XI) mRNA. However, alpha 2(XI) and alpha 1(II) collagen RNA were not detectable; therefore, SMCs cannot synthesize the same type XI collagen as found in cartilage. Since type XI collagen is structurally related to type V collagen, the expression of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen mRNA in SMCs was characterized. Levels of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen mRNAs were low in exponentially growing SMCs and increased 3-4-fold as cells became confluent. Increased mRNA levels were also observed when exponentially growing subconfluent SMCs were incubated in medium containing 0.5% fetal bovine serum for 24 h, similar to the effects of serum deprivation on the expression of types I and III collagen genes (Kindy, M. S., Chang, C.-J., and Sonenshein, G. E. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 11426-11430). However, as cell density increased, serum deprivation resulted in very different responses for these collagen genes. Serum deprivation caused a decrease in expression of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen mRNAs in cultures as they approached confluence. In contrast, at confluence alpha 1(I) and alpha 2(I) mRNA levels no longer responded to serum concentration whereas expression of alpha 1(III) mRNA remained inducible by serum deprivation. These results suggest concerted regulation of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen gene expression, which is distinct from that for the chains of type I and type III collagen with respect to cell density and serum.  相似文献   

5.
C Niyibizi  D R Eyre 《FEBS letters》1989,242(2):314-318
Type V collagen prepared from bovine bone was resolved into three distinct alpha-chains by high performance liquid chromatography and gel electrophoresis. Peptide mapping established two chains as alpha 1(V) and alpha 2(V) as expected and the third as the cartilage alpha 1(XI) chain (previously thought to be unique to cartilage). In adult bone, the type V collagen fraction was richer in alpha 1(XI) chains than in fetal bone (about 1/3 of the chains in the adult). How these polypeptides are organized into native molecules is not yet clear, though the stoichiometry suggests cross-type heterotrimers between the type V and XI chains.  相似文献   

6.
Tissue-specific assembly of fibers composed of the major collagen types I and II depends in part on the formation of heterotypic fibrils, using the quantitatively minor collagens V and XI. Here we report the identification of a new fibrillar-like collagen chain that is related to the fibrillar alpha1(V), alpha1(XI), and alpha2(XI) collagen polypeptides and which is coexpressed with type I collagen in the developing bone and eye. The new collagen was designated the alpha1(XXIV) chain and consists of a long triple helical domain flanked by typical propeptide-like sequences. The carboxyl propeptide is classic, with 8 conserved cysteine residues. The amino-terminal peptide contains a thrombospodin-N-terminal-like (TSP) motif and a highly charged segment interspersed with several tyrosine residues, like the fibril diameter-regulating collagen chains alpha1(V) and alpha1(XI). However, a short imperfection in the triple helix makes alpha1(XXIV) unique from other chains of the vertebrate fibrillar collagen family. The triple helical interruption and additional select features in both terminal peptides are common to the fibrillar chains of invertebrate organisms. Based on these data, we propose that collagen XXIV is an ancient molecule that may contribute to the regulation of type I collagen fibrillogenesis at specific anatomical locations during fetal development.  相似文献   

7.
The type XXVII collagen gene codes for a novel vertebrate fibrillar collagen that is highly conserved in man, mouse, and fish (Fugu rubripes). The pro(alpha)1(XXVII) chain has a domain structure similar to that of the type B clade chains (alpha1(V), alpha3(V), alpha1(XI), and alpha2(XI)). However, compared with other vertebrate fibrillar collagens (types I, II, III, V, and XI), type XXVII collagen has unusual molecular features such as no minor helical domain, a major helical domain that is short and interrupted, and a short chain selection sequence within the NC1 domain. Pro(alpha)1(XXVII) mRNA is 9 kb and expressed by chondrocytes but also by a variety of epithelial cell layers in developing tissues including stomach, lung, gonad, skin, cochlear, and tooth. By Western blotting, type XXVII antisera recognized multiple bands of 240-110 kDa in tissue extracts and collagenous bands of 150-140 kDa in the conditioned medium of the differentiating chondrogenic ATDC5 cell line. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that type XXVII, together with the closely related type XXIV collagen gene, form a new, third clade (type C) within the vertebrate fibrillar collagen family. Furthermore, the exon structure of the type XXVII collagen gene is similar to, but distinct from, those of the genes coding for the type A or B clade pro(alpha) chains.  相似文献   

8.
Collagen type XI is a component of hyaline cartilage consisting of alpha 1(XI), alpha 2(XI), and alpha 3(XI) chains; with 5-10% of the total collagen content, it is a minor but significant component next to type II collagen, but its function and precise localization in cartilaginous tissues is still unclear. Owing to the homology of the alpha 3(XI) and alpha 1(II) collagen chains, attempts to prepare specific antibodies to native type XI collagen have been unsuccessful in the past. In this study, we report on the preparation and use for immunohistochemistry of a polyclonal antibody specific for alpha 2(XI) denatured collagen chains. The antibody was prepared by immunization with the isolated alpha 2(XI) chain and reacts neither with native type XI collagen nor type I, II, V, or IX by ELISA or immunoblotting, nor with alpha 1(XI) or alpha 3(XI), but with alpha 2(XI) chains. Using this antibody, it was possible to specifically localize alpha 2(XI) in cartilage by pretreating tissue sections with 6 M urea. In double immunofluorescence staining experiments, the distribution of alpha 2(XI) as indicative for type XI collagen in fetal bovine and human cartilage was compared with that of type II collagen, using a monoclonal antibody to alpha 1(II). Type XI collagen was found throughout the matrix of hyaline cartilage. However, owing to cross-reactivity of the monoclonal anti-alpha 1(II) with alpha 3(XI), both antibodies produced the same staining pattern. Cellular heterogeneity was, however, detected in monolayer cultures of human chondrocytes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The biosynthesis of collagen by the A204 cell line was examined using polyclonal antibodies raised against collagen type V and type XI. The study of the pepsin-digested collagen showed that it is composed mainly of alpha 1(XI) and alpha 2(V) collagen chains in an apparent 2:1 ratio, suggesting the formation of heterotypic molecules [alpha 1(XI)]2 alpha 2(V). The existence of this chain stoichiometry was further demonstrated by immunoprecipitation of the molecule with an antibody recognizing alpha 2(V) but not alpha 1(XI) collagen chains. Electron microscopy analyses of 24-h cultures showed that this matrix is composed of thin fibrils, that can be decorated with immunogold-labelled anti-(type-V collagen) IgG, but not with anti-(type-XI collagen) IgG. The collagen matrix laid down by A204 cells is highly insoluble. In the presence of beta-aminopropionitrile, an inhibitor of lysyl oxidase, only a small proportion of intact collagen could be extracted without proteolytic treatment. Immunoblotting of intact medium collagen from cultures performed in the presence of beta-aminopropionitrile showed four distinct bands with each antibody. The migration of the bands, stained with anti-(type-V collagen) IgG, had apparent molecular masses of 127, 149, 161 and 198 kDa (compared to globular standards) while the bands stained with anti-(type-XI collagen) IgG had apparent masses of 145, 182, 207 and 225 kDa. These data indicate that type-V and type-XI collagen chains can assemble in heterotypic isoforms. In this system, the synthesized isoforms are able to aggregate into a highly cohesive matrix and they undergo a proteolytic processing closely similar to that of other fibrillar collagens.  相似文献   

10.
Using competitive binding experiments, it was found that native type XI collagen binds heparin, heparan sulfate, and dermatan sulfate. However, interactions were not evident with hyaluronic acid, keratan sulfate, or chondroitin sulfate chains over the concentration range studied. Chondrocyte-matrix interactions were investigated using cell attachment to solid phase type XI collagen. Pretreatment of chondrocytes with either heparin or heparinase significantly reduced attachment to type XI collagen. Incubation of denatured and cyanogen bromide-cleaved type XI collagen with radiolabeled heparin identified sites of interaction on the alpha1(XI) and alpha2(XI) chains. NH(2)-terminal sequence data confirmed that the predominant heparin-binding peptide contained the sequence GKPGPRGQRGPTGPRGSRGAR from the alpha1(XI) chain. Using rotary shadowing electron microscopy of native type XI collagen molecules and heparin-bovine serum albumin conjugate, an additional binding site was identified at one end of the triple helical region of the collagen molecule. This coincides with consensus heparin binding motifs present at the amino-terminal ends of both the alpha1(XI) and the alpha2(XI) chains. The contribution of glycosaminoglycan-type XI collagen interactions to cartilage matrix stabilization is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
We have isolated three overlapping cDNA clones encoding the pro alpha 2(XI) collagen chain from a human chondrocyte cDNA library. Together, the cDNAs code for 257 uninterrupted Gly-X-Y triplets (almost 80% of the triple helical domain) and about 200 amino acid residues of the carboxyl telopeptide and carboxyl propeptide. The identification of the clones as pro alpha 2(XI) cDNAs was based on the complete identity between the amino acid sequences of three tryptic peptides derived from human alpha 2(XI) collagen and the cDNA-derived sequence. We have also sequenced six exons within a human genomic alpha 2(XI) cosmid clone. This sequence shows that although type XI collagen belongs to the fibril-forming class of collagens, there are substantial differences in exon sizes at the 3' end of the gene when comparing the alpha 2(XI) gene with those of human types I, II, and III collagens. Finally, pro alpha 2(XI) cDNA has been used as a probe to determine the location of the gene by in situ hybridization of chromosome spreads. The results demonstrate that the gene is located close to the region p212 on chromosome 6. Northern blot analysis shows that the gene is expressed in cartilage but not in adult liver, skin, and tendon.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Type XI collagen is a minor and poorly characterized structural component of cartilage. Recently, cDNA and genomic clones coding for the pro alpha 1 chain of human Type XI collagen, formerly 1 alpha collagen, have been isolated and fully characterized. Here we have used one such probe to establish the chromosomal localization of the pro alpha 1 (XI) collagen gene (COL11A1) by hybridization to filter-bound DNA isolated from flow-sorted chromosomes and by in situ hybridization on metaphase chromosomes. This combination of approaches has enabled us to locate COL1A11 in the p21 region of chromosome 1. This represents the first mapping of a Type XI collagen gene and the first assignment of a collagen locus to chromosome 1. These studies also provide additional evidence for the nearly uniform dispersion of the human fibrillar collagen genes in the human genome.  相似文献   

14.
15.
To determine whether native bovine type XI collagen (BXI) is arthritogenic, five strains of inbred mice were immunized with BXI/CFA. Arthritis was not observed in any of these strains, though it was prevalent in DBA/1 and B10.RIII controls immunized with bovine type II collagen (BII). Antisera from BXI-immunized mice reacted with mouse type XI collagen (MsXI), weakly with the alpha-chains of BXI, and minimally with mouse type II collagen (MsII). However, antisera to BII reacted with MsII and MsXI, indicating antibodies to conformation-independent epitopes shared by alpha 1(II) and alpha 3(XI). Mice immunized with BXI containing a small amount of BII developed arthritis much like those immunized with BII; sera from these mice reacted with MsXI and MsII. Delayed-type hypersensitivity responses differed from IgG responses, i.e., BXI elicited responses to alpha 1(XI), alpha 2(XI), alpha 3(XI), and alpha 1(II); BII, to alpha 3(XI) and alpha 1(II) exclusively. To determine whether alpha 1(XI), alpha 2(XI), alpha 3(XI), and alpha 1(II) are arthritogenic, DBA/1J mice were immunized with each alpha-chain. Arthritis was seen in mice injected with alpha 3(XI) or alpha 1(II). Sera to both alpha-chains reacted similarly with MsII and peptide fragment alpha 1(II)-CB11. Epitope mapping using polyclonal and mAb to type II collagen revealed that all polyclonal and 11 of 14 mAb reacted with alpha 3(XI) and alpha 1(II), whereas three mAb reacted only with alpha 1(II). In conclusion, BXI is immunogenic but not arthritogenic in five strains of mice, whereas alpha 3(XI) and alpha 1(II) are arthritogenic and immunogenic in DBA/1 mice and share greater than or equal to 11 epitopes recognized by autoantibody.  相似文献   

16.
Type XI collagen is a quantitatively minor yet essential constituent of the cartilage extracellular matrix. The amino propeptide of the alpha1 chain remains attached to the rest of the molecule for a longer period of time after synthesis than the other amino propeptides of type XI collagen and has been localized to the surface of thin collagen fibrils. Yeast two-hybrid system was used to demonstrate that a homodimer of alpha1(XI) amino propeptide (alpha1(XI)Npp) could form in vivo. Interaction was also confirmed using multi-angle laser light scattering, detecting an absolute weight average molar mass ranging from the size of a monomer to the size of a dimer (25,000-50,000 g/mol), respectively. Binding was shown to be saturable by ELISA. An interaction between recombinant alpha1(XI)Npp and the endogenous alpha1(XI)Npp was observed, and specificity for alpha1(XI)Npp but not alpha2(XI)Npp was demonstrated by co-precipitation. The interaction between the recombinant form of alpha1(XI)Npp and the endogenous alpha1(XI)Npp resulted in a stable association during the regeneration of cartilage extracellular matrix by fetal bovine chondrocytes maintained in pellet culture, generating a protein that migrated with an apparent molecular mass of 50-60 kDa on an SDS-polyacrylamide gel.  相似文献   

17.
Collagen type V/XI is a minor but essential component of collagen fibrils in vertebrates. We here report on age- and tissue-related variations in isoform usage in cartilages. With maturation of articular cartilage, the α1(V) chain progressively replaced the α2(XI) chain. A mix of the molecular isoforms, α1(XI)α1(V)α3(XI) and α1(XI)α2(XI)α3(XI), best explained this finding. A prominence of α1(V) chains is therefore characteristic and a potential biomarker of mature mammalian articular cartilage. Analysis of cross-linked peptides showed that the α1(V) chains were primarily cross-linked to α1(XI) chains in the tissue and hence an integral component of the V/XI polymer. From nucleus pulposus of the intervertebral disc (in which the bulk collagen monomer is type II as in articular cartilage), type V/XI collagen consisted of a mix of five genetically distinct chains, α1(XI), α2(XI), α3(XI), α1(V), and α2(V). These presumably were derived from several different molecular isoforms, including α1(XI)α2(XI)α3(XI), (α1(XI))2α2(V), and others. Meniscal fibrocartilage shows yet another V/XI phenotype. The findings support and extend the concept that the clade B subfamily of COL5 and COL11 gene products should be considered members of the same collagen subfamily, from which, in combination with clade A gene products (COL2A1 or COL5A2), a range of molecular isoforms has evolved into tissue-dependent usage. We propose an evolving role for collagen V/XI isoforms as an adaptable polymeric template of fibril macro-architecture.The collagen framework of hyaline cartilages is based on a covalently cross-linked heteropolymeric network of types II, IX, and XI collagens. During development, collagen type IX molecules are covalently linked to the surface of thin, new fibrils of type II collagen polymerized on a template of type XI collagen (15). In fetal cartilage, type XI collagen is a heterotrimer of three genetically distinct chains, α1(XI), α2(XI), and α3(XI) in a 1:1:1 ratio (69). The α3(XI) chain has the same primary sequence as α1(II), but the chains differ in their post-translational processing and cross-linking properties (79). All three collagen subunits, II, IX, and XI, are heavily cross-linked in the same fibril through a lysyl oxidase-mediated mechanism (2, 5, 9). The location of the cross-links determined by sequence analysis of peptides prepared from proteolytically degraded fibrils reveals a high degree of chain specificity (9). Collagen XI molecules are linked to each other in a head-to-tail fashion by N-telopeptide2 to helix cross-links and laterally to type II collagen molecules through α1(II) C-telopeptides (9). Isolated from mature articular cartilage, type XI collagen includes a significant pool of α1(V) chains (6), implying the presence of V/XI hybrid molecules. The ratio of type XI collagen to type II collagen is about 1 to 10 in fetal bovine and human epiphyseal cartilage when compared with 1 to 30 in adult articular cartilage. Similarly, the ratio of collagen IX to collagen II falls from about 1 to 10 to 1 to 100 between fetal and adult. In adult articular cartilage, most of the collagen IX is located in the immediate pericellular matrix (1012).The intervertebral disc has a unique collagen architecture that combines features of ligament and cartilage in its morphology, function, and matrix biochemistry. The lamellar fabric of the outer annulus fibrosus combines collagens I and II fibrils in a complex weave with a radial gradient from mostly type I in the outermost layers and mostly type II in the interior. Nucleus pulposus, the gel-like center of the young intervertebral disc, has a similar collagen molecular phenotype to hyaline cartilage in which types II, IX, and XI collagens are the principal cross-linked fibrillar components (1316). Collagen IX in the disc has a different protein isoform to that of hyaline cartilages. The α1(IX) chain is expressed as a short form that lacks the amino-terminal NC4 domain (16). One of the aims of the present study was to determine whether a unique pattern of type V/XI hybrid molecules is present in disc tissue when compared with articular cartilage and a more typical fibrocartilage, the knee meniscus.The results show an accumulation of collagen α1(V) chains as articular cartilage matures. A related but distinct complexity in chain usage in the type V/XI collagen of nucleus pulposus is also revealed. Such tissue diversity suggests that the different molecular isoforms produce functional differences in the type V/XI polymeric template on which the bulk fibril architecture of a tissue is built.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Type V collagen was prepared from human amnionic/chorionic membranes and separated into alpha 1(V) and alpha 2(V) polypeptide chains. The alpha 1(V) chain was digested with cyanogen bromide and nine peptides were obtained and purified. Three of the peptides, alpha 1(V)CB1, CB4, and CB7 having molecular weights of 5000, 8000, and 6000, respectively, were further analyzed by amino acid sequence analysis and thermolytic or tryptic digestions. CB1 contained 54 amino acids and identification of its complete sequence was aided by thermolysin digestion and isolation of two peptides, Th1 and Th2. CB4 contained 81 amino acids and sequence analysis of intact CB4 and five tryptic peptides provided us with its complete amino acid sequence. The peptide CB7 contained 67 amino acids and was cleaved into four tryptic peptides that were used for complete sequence analysis. The above results represent the first available covalent structure information on the alpha 1(V) collagen chain. These data enabled us to establish the location of these peptides within the helical structure of other collagen chains. CB4 was homologous to residues 66-145 in the collagen chain while CB1 represented residues 146-200 and CB7 was homologous with residues 201-269. This alignment was facilitated by identification of a helical collagen crossing site consisting of Hyl-Gly-His-Arg located at positions 87-90 in all collagen chains of this size thus far identified. Seventy-one percent homology (excluding Gly residues) was found between amino acids in this region of the alpha 1(XI) and of alpha 1(V) collagen chains while only 21 and 19% identity was calculated for the same region of alpha 2(V) and alpha 1(I) collagen chains, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
Chicken alpha1(V) collagen cDNAs have been cloned by a variety of methods and positively identified. We present here the entire translated sequence of the chick polypeptide and compare selected regions to other collagen chains in the type V/XI family.  相似文献   

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