Abstract

The present study shows that collagen XVIII is, next to perlecan and agrin, the third basal lamina heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) and the first collagen/proteoglycan with heparan sulfate side chains. By using monoclonal antibodies to an unidentified HSPG in chick, 14 cDNA clones were isolated from a chick yolk sac library. All clones had a common nucleotide sequence that was homologous to the mRNA sequences of mouse and human collagen XVIII. The deduced amino acid sequence of the chick fragment shows an 83% overall homology with the human and mouse collagen XVIII. Similar to the human and mouse homologue, the chick collagen XVIII mRNA has a size of 4.5 kilobase pairs. In Western blots, collagen XVIII appeared as a smear with a molecular mass of 300 kDa. After treatment with heparitinase, the protein was reduced in molecular mass by 120 kDa to a protein core of 180 kDa. Collagen XVIII has typical features of a collagen, such as its existence, under non-denaturing conditions, as a non-covalently linked oligomer, and a sensitivity of the core protein to collagenase digestion. It also has characteristics of an HSPG, such as long heparitinase-sensitive carbohydrate chains and a highly negative net charge. Collagen XVIII is abundant in basal laminae of the retina, epidermis, pia, cardiac and striated muscle, kidney, blood vessels, and lung. In situ hybridization showed that the main expression of collagen XVIII HSPG in the chick embryo is in the kidney and the peripheral nervous system. As a substrate, collagen XVIII moderately promoted the adhesion of Schwann cells but had no such activity on peripheral nervous system neurons and axons.

Highlights

  • Members of the collagen family, such as collagen IX and XII, carry glycosaminoglycan side chains and exist as part-time proteoglycans

  • The collagen sequences, corresponding to the 9th and 10th human and mouse collagen XVIII domain, are close to 100% conserved compared with mouse and human collagen XVIII, whereas the non-collagenous domains are less homologous to the human and mouse sequence

  • Further support that the unknown chick heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) is collagen XVIII is the size of the mRNA that is with 4.5 kb very similar to the size of the collagen XVIII mRNA of mouse and human [21, 23, 24]

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Summary

Collagen XVIII Is a Basement Membrane Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycan*

Vol 273, No 39, Issue of September 25, pp. 25404 –25412, 1998 Printed in U.S.A. From the ‡Department of Neurobiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261 and ¶Neurobiotechnology Center, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210. The present study shows that collagen XVIII is, next to perlecan and agrin, the third basal lamina heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) and the first collagen/proteoglycan with heparan sulfate side chains. Collagen XVIII has typical features of a collagen, such as its existence, under nondenaturing conditions, as a non-covalently linked oligomer, and a sensitivity of the core protein to collagenase digestion It has characteristics of an HSPG, such as long heparitinase-sensitive carbohydrate chains and a highly negative net charge. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are members of a family of cell-surface proteins with long carbohydrate chains of repeating disaccharide units [1,2,3]. They exist as integral membrane proteins [4] or as secreted extracellular matrix proteins. Collagen XVIII is a constituent of almost all embryonic and adult basal laminae

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Collagen XVIII Is a Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycan
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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