Abstract

We have analysed the collagens present in vascular basement membranes isolated from bovine retinal and cerebral microvessels and bovine renal glomeruli, and from the non-vascular basement membrane of bovine lens capsule. These are compared with the collagens produced by cultured bovine retinal microvascular pericytes and lens epithelial cells, and by canine retinal microvascular endothelial cells, in vitro. Biochemical and immunocytochemical analyses indicate that all of the vascular basement membrane preparations have an identical collagenous composition, consisting of the same polypeptides present in lens capsule (primarily type IV collagen), together with other polypeptides that are identified as type I, and a small amount of type III collagen. Identification of the latter is based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis in the presence and absence of a reducing agent. Immunocytochemical studies, however, demonstrate type I, type IV and some type V collagen in the basement membranes of the isolated microvessels. The cultured microvascular cells produce predominantly type I collagen molecules, but they also produce other collagen peptides that appear to be type IV, and, at least in some experiments, small amounts of type III collagen. The biochemical identification of collagens type I and IV is confirmed by immunocytochemistry. However, results with anti-type I collagen and procollagen antibodies in cultured pericytes vary with antibodies from different sources. The quantities of the type IV peptides produced by the cultured cells also vary in different experiments.

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