Abstract

Treatment of cultured human skin fibroblasts with increasing doses of gamma-interferon produces a distinct reduction of steady-state levels of the alpha 3 chain of collagen VI mRNA by about 60% but not of the alpha 1 and alpha 2 chain mRNAs. A similar decrease was also observed for collagen I and III mRNA while fibronectin mRNA remained at the same level. The decrease in alpha 3(VI) mRNA is accompanied by a reduced synthesis of collagen VI and by a reduced deposition of both collagen VI and fibronectin in urea-insoluble form in the cell matrix. No other gamma-interferon effects were observed for fibronectin biosynthesis. Immunoprecipitation of metabolically labeled collagen VI demonstrated a strongly reduced synthesis (by 65-80%) of intracellular alpha 3(VI) chains with no decrease found for alpha 1(VI) and alpha 2(VI) chains. All three chains were, however, found to be reduced in the culture medium. Pepsin treatment of immunoprecipitated collagen VI showed similar chain ratios for material in the culture medium obtained in the absence or presence of gamma-interferon. It indicates that correctly assembled heterotrimers of the composition [alpha 1(VI) alpha 2(VI) alpha 3(VI)] are formed and secreted also in the absence of an equivalent alpha 3(VI) chain synthesis but at a reduced rate. The data support previous predictions from sequence analyses [Chu et al. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 18,601-18,606] that collagen VI molecules composed of all three constituent chains are more stable than other assembly alternatives.

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