Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a generalized disorder of connective tissue characterized by fragile bones and easy susceptibility to fracture. Most cases of OI are caused by mutations in type I collagen. We have identified and assembled structural mutations in type I collagen genes (COL1A1 and COL1A2, encoding the proα1(I) and proα2(I) chains, respectively) that result in OI. Quantitative defects causing type I OI were not included. Of these 832 independent mutations, 682 result in substitution for glycine residues in the triple helical domain of the encoded protein and 150 alter splice sites. Distinct genotype-phenotype relationships emerge for each chain. Onethird of the mutations that result in glycine substitutions in α1(I) are lethal, especially when the substituting residues are charged or have a branched side chain. Substitutions in the first 200 residues are nonlethal and have variable outcome thereafter, unrelated to folding or helix stability domains. Two exclusively lethal regions (helix positions 691-823 and 910-964) align with major ligand binding regions (MLBRs), suggesting crucial interactions of collagen monomers or fibrils with integrins, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), fibronectin, and cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP). Mutations in COL1A2 are predominantly nonlethal (80%). Lethal substitutions are located in eight regularly spaced clusters along the chain, supporting a regional model. The lethal regions align with proteoglycan binding sites along the fibril, suggesting a role in fibrilmatrix interactions. Recurrences at the same site in α2(I) are generally concordant for outcome, unlike α1(I). Splice site mutations comprise 20% of helical mutations identified in OI patients, and may lead to exon skipping, intron inclusion, or the activation of cryptic splice sites. Splice site mutations in COL1A1 are rarely lethal; they often lead to frameshifts and the mild type I phenotype. In α2(I), lethal exon skipping events are located in the carboxyl half of the chain. Our data on genotype-phenotype relationships indicate that the two collagen chains play very different roles in matrix integrity and that phenotype depends on intracellular and extracellular events.
Type I collagen is the most abundant protein in humans, and it helps to maintain the integrity of many tissues via its interactions with cell surfaces, other extracellular matrix molecules, and growth and differentiation factors. Nearly 50 molecules have been found to interact with type I collagen, and for about half of them, binding sites on this collagen have been elucidated. In addition, over 300 mutations in type I collagen associated with human connective tissue disorders have been described. However, the spatial relationships between the known ligand-binding sites and mutation positions have not been examined. To this end, here we have created a map of type I collagen that includes all of its ligand-binding sites and mutations. The map reveals the existence of several hot spots for ligand interactions on type I collagen and that most of the binding sites locate to its C-terminal half. Moreover, on the collagen fibril some potentially relevant relationships between binding sites were observed including the following: fibronectin-and certain integrin-binding regions are near neighbors, which may mechanistically relate to fibronectin-dependent cell-collagen attachment; proteoglycan binding may potentially impact upon collagen fibrillogenesis, cell-collagen attachment, and collagen glycation seen in diabetes and aging; and mutations associated with osteogenesis imperfecta and other disorders show apparently nonrandom distribution patterns within both the monomer and fibril, implying that mutation positions correlate with disease phenotype. These and other observations presented here may provide novel insights into evaluating type I collagen functions and the relationships between its binding partners and mutations.
Perlecan, a ubiquitous basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan, plays key roles in blood vessel growth and structural integrity. We discovered that the C terminus of perlecan potently inhibited four aspects of angiogenesis: endothelial cell migration, collagen-induced endothelial tube morphogenesis, and blood vessel growth in the chorioallantoic membrane and in Matrigel plug assays. The C terminus of perlecan was active at nanomolar concentrations and blocked endothelial cell adhesion to fibronectin and type I collagen, without directly binding to either protein; henceforth we have named it "endorepellin." We also found that endothelial cells possess a significant number of high affinity (K d of 11 nM) binding sites for endorepellin and that endorepellin binds endostatin and counteracts its anti-angiogenic effects. Thus, endorepellin represents a novel anti-angiogenic product, which may retard tumor neovascularization and hence tumor growth in vivo.
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 twodimensional 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.Type I collagen is the most abundant protein in humans and other vertebrates, comprising much of the fibrous extracellular matrix scaffold of bones, tendons, skin, and many other tissues (1-4). In general, type I collagen and its binding partners are proposed to provide mechanical strength and form to tissues. Collagenous scaffolds are laid down and remodeled by cells and are also a predominant substrate for cell interactions, migration, and differentiation. Consequently, various debilitating human diseases are associated with type I collagen mutations, including osteogenesis imperfecta (OI, 2 brittle bone disease), Ehlers Danlos syndrome, vascular disorders, and others (3, 5). Type I collagen is also employed in human medicine as hemostatic sponges and implants to repair wounds and in tissue engineering applications as scaffolds (6).Type I collagen is synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum as ␣1 and ␣2 procollagen chains, each encoded by separate genes that are translated into proteins somewhat longer than 1000 amino acid residues (3, 7). Nucleation domains on the C-terminal propeptide promote the polymerization of two ␣1 and one ␣2 chains into the procollagen triple helical monomer (Fig. 1, A and B). The triple helical domain of procollagen is composed of contiguous glycine-X-Y tri-peptide repeats, with the obligate glyci...
Figure 1 Heterogeneity in structure of pericellular and cell-associated heparan sulfate proteoglycans with pro-and antiangiogenic activity. Syndecans are transmembrane proteoglycans, while glypicans are bound to the plasma membrane via a phosphoinositol linkage. Type XVIII collagen, a hybrid collagen/proteoglycan molecule, is a member of the multiplexin gene family characterized by alternating collagenous (thin lines) and noncollagenous domains (rectangles, not drawn in scale). Perlecan is a modular proteoglycan with five distinct domains. Both type XVIII collagen and perlecan are secreted products but are in close association with the cell surface and are intrinsic components of most basement membranes. Agrin, another HSPG with similarities to perlecan, is not shown. Glycosaminoglycan chains are shown as fuchsia-colored beaded strings and are not drawn to scale relative to their respective protein cores. The precise location and number of the heparan sulfate chains on type XVIII collagen are not known.
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