Abstract

During tendon development collagen fibrillogenesis occurs in extracellular micro-domains defined by the tenocytes. This permits cellular regulation of the extracellular steps involved in the tissue-specific matrix assembly required for function. The hypothesis tested here is that collagen V associates with the tenocyte surface where it functions in regulation of collagen assembly and cell-directed fibril deposition. The in vitro and in vivo data demonstrate that collagen V is a quantitatively minor component of the tendon. It is preferentially localized on the tenocyte surface as distinct foci in tendons and in cell culture. In vitro data indicate that this interaction with the tenocyte is not HSPG GAG-dependent. Collagen V is present as the mature, processed form, is absent from the media, and is a significant part of the detergent-insoluble cell layer, presumably as part of a membrane-associated complex. In contrast, procollagen I is not efficiently processed and is found predominantly in the culture media. Our data suggest that the regulatory role of collagen V requires collagen V to occupy a different cellular niche from the structural collagen I. In monolayer cultures, the conversion to the tissue form of collagen V and its deposition with the cell layer suggest efficient engagement of procollagen V with pericellular receptors and processing enzymes. The secretion of collagen I into the media and inefficient processing of procollagen I suggest reduced accessibility to these pericellular molecules due to disengagement from the cell surface. This all points to differential spatial localization of collagen V as a mechanism to optimize its regulatory roles during the cell-surface directed steps in tendon collagen fibril assembly.

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