THE COLLAGENS
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Transcript THE COLLAGENS
COLLAGEN CHEMISTRY
AND BIOLOGY
DEFINITION:
A protein with chains containing repetitive Gly-X-Y sequences
allowing formation of molecules with triple-helical domains.
The triple-helical domains as well as nontriple-helical domains
of the molecules interact to form multimolecular aggregates
that function primarily as structural elements in extracellular
spaces.
Collagens are the most abundant protein in mammals (25% of
protein mass).
Locations of Collagens (Skin)
Locations of Collagens
(Basement Membranes)
LOCATIONS OF COLLAGEN
(VASCULAR SYSTEM)
LOCATIONS OF COLLAGENS
BONES
TEETH
CARTILAGE
LOCATIONS OF COLLAGENS
(TEETH)
LOCATIONS OF COLLAGENS
(EYE)
Posterior Polymorphous Corneal
Dystrophy
One cause is a dominantly acting
mutation in a gene encoding for
collagen VIII (COL8A2). Ref: Coupal et al.
Osteogenesis imperfecta
Blue sclerae of an OI victim
Caused by genetic mutations in collagen genes
COL1A1, COL1A2
COLLAGEN TYPES
27 types with 45genetically distinct chains:
1.Fiber-forming collagens:
the quantitatively predominate collagens
chains form several molecular species:
(Types I, II, III,V, and XI) + (XXIV and XXVII)
procollagen to collagen conversion
fibers constructed of staggered, side to side,
parallel association of molecules
COLLAGEN TYPES, CONT.
2. Fiber-associated collagens:
(IX, XII, XIV, XVI, XIX, XX, XXI, XXII)
3. Network collagens (IV,VIII, X)
4. Filament collagen (VI)
5. Anchoring fibril collagen (VII)
6.Transmembrane collagens:
(XIII, XVII, XXIII, XXV)
7. Multiplexins (XV, XVIII)
Characteristics: 1) smaller and often numerous helical domains;
2) procollagen to collagen conversion (seldom);
3) staggered, side to side and antiparallel association when aggregates
are formed.
Collagens: primary structure
Almost every third residue is glycine
Approx 17% is proline
Contains hydroxyproline
Contains hydroxylysine (which can form
interchain bonds or be glycosylated)
Collagen – A Triple Helix
Principal component of connective tissue (tendons, cartilage, bones,
teeth)
Basic unit is tropocollagen:
◦ Three intertwined polypeptide chains (1K residues each)
◦ MW = 285,000
◦ 300 nm long, 1.4 nm diameter
◦ Unique amino acid composition, including hydroxylysine
and hydroxyproline
◦ Hydroxyproline is formed by the vitamin C-dependent
prolyl hydroxylase reaction.
Collagen – Hydroxylation of Proline
Scurvy (Vitamin C deficiency)
Scorbutic gums due to of scurvy. Notice gingival red triangles.
Vitamin C is needed for post translational amino acid
modifications in collagen.
Collagen – A Triple Helix
The secrets of its a.a. composition...
Nearly one residue out of three is Gly
Proline content is unusually high
Unusual amino acids found:
◦ 4-hydroxyproline
◦ 3-hydroxyproline
◦ 5-hydroxylysine
◦ Pro and HyPro together make 30% of res.
The Collagen Triple Helix
A case of structure following composition
The
unusual amino acid composition of
collagen is unsuited for alpha helices or
beta sheets
It is ideally suited for the collagen triple
helix: three intertwined helical strands
Much more extended than alpha helix,
with a rise per residue of 2.9 Angstroms
3.3 residues per turn
Long stretches of Gly-Pro-Pro/HyP
Collagen – A Triple Helix
Figure 6.16 Poly(Gly-Pro-Pro),
a collagen-like right-handed
triple helix composed of three
left-handed helical chains.
Collagen Fibers
Staggered arrays of tropocollagens
Banding pattern in EMs with 68 nm repeat
Since tropocollagens are 300 nm long, there
must be 40 nm gaps between adjacent
tropocollagens (5 x 68 = 340 nm)
40 nm gaps are called "hole regions" - they
contain carbohydrate and are thought to be
nucleation sites for bone formation
Collagen – A Triple Helix
Figure 6.17 In the electron
microscope, collagen fibers
exhibit alternating light and
dark bands. The dark
bands correspond to the
40-nm gaps between pairs
of aligned collagen triple
helices.
Structural basis of the collagen triple helix
Every
third residue faces the crowded
center of the helix - only Gly fits here
Pro and HyP suit the constraints of φ
and ψ
Interchain H-bonds involving HyP
stabilize helix
Fibrils are further strengthened by
intrachain lysine-lysine and interchain
hydroxypyridinium crosslinks
The hole regions of collagen fibrils may be the
sites of nucleation for bone mineralization
A disaccharide of galactose
and glucose is covalently
linked to the 5-hydroxyl group
of hydroxylysines in collagen
by the combined action of
galactosyltransferase and
glucosyltransferase.
LYSYL HYDROXYLATION
MINERALIZATION
SYNTHESIS – ASSEMBLY OF A
COLLAGEN MOLECULE
SPECIFICITY OF CHAIN
ASSOCIATION
EXTRACELLLULAR PROCESSING
OF COLLAGEN
FIBER ARCHITECTURE
CROSS-LINKS IN A FIBER
PHYSICAL STABILITY
FIBROUS COLLAGEN SUMMARY
INDUSTRIAL AND CLINICAL
USES OF COLLAGEN
Denatured collagen (gelatin):
FOODS
COATINGS
CAPSULES
Native collagen:
SURGICAL DRESSINGS
IMPLANTS
TISSUE ENGINEERING
PREPARATION FOR CROSSLINKING
REACTIONS FOR CROSS-LINKS