Abstract

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.

Highlights

  • 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

  • N- and C-proteinases remove the globular termini of procollagen, and every ϳ67 nm along the fiber axis, five monomers assemble in a quarter-staggered fashion to form part of the supramolecular “helix,” the microfibril

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Ligand Binding Sites and Functional Domains—Positions of binding sites and functional domains were obtained from the literature and are indicated by labeled boxes placed next to the relevant sequences. The mers may be possible if their binding sites align vertically within map is analyzed alongside of a three-dimensional model of the D-period, and if their two-dimensional structure allows the collagen microfibrillar structure that was recently deter- them to simultaneously bind more than one triple helix and mined [11]. This analysis reveals novel insights into how the reach another ligand or ligand-binding site on neighboring type I collagen fibril, and perhaps collagen fibrils in general, monomer(s). Statistics—Statistical analyses of mutation distributions on the collagen fibril appear under “Results” and in the supplemental materials

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
H E PA RANSUL FAT E P G s
G-V OI1 HSP47
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