Abstract

Intracellular collagen assembly begins with the oxidative folding of ∼30-kDa C-terminal propeptide (C-Pro) domains. Folded C-Pro domains then template the formation of triple helices between appropriate partner strands. Numerous C-Pro missense variants that disrupt or delay triple-helix formation are known to cause disease, but our understanding of the specific proteostasis defects introduced by these variants remains immature. Moreover, it is unclear whether or not recognition and quality control of misfolded C-Pro domains is mediated by recognizing stalled assembly of triple-helical domains or by direct engagement of the C-Pro itself. Here, we integrate biochemical and cellular approaches to illuminate the proteostasis defects associated with osteogenesis imperfecta-causing mutations within the collagen-α2(I) C-Pro domain. We first show that "C-Pro-only" constructs recapitulate key aspects of the behavior of full-length Colα2(I) constructs. Of the variants studied, perhaps the most severe assembly defects are associated with C1163R C-Proα2(I), which is incapable of forming stable trimers and is retained within cells. We find that the presence or absence of an unassembled triple-helical domain is not the key feature driving cellular retention versus secretion. Rather, the proteostasis network directly engages the misfolded C-Pro domain itself to prevent secretion and initiate clearance. Using MS-based proteomics, we elucidate how the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) proteostasis network differentially engages misfolded C1163R C-Proα2(I) and targets it for ER-associated degradation. These results provide insights into collagen folding and quality control with the potential to inform the design of proteostasis network-targeted strategies for managing collagenopathies.

Highlights

  • Proper folding and assembly of collagen is critical for maintaining the structural integrity of extracellular matrices [1,2,3]

  • Instead of forming heterotrimers with C-Proa1(I), P1182R C-Proa2(I) formed disulfide-linked homodimers and homooligomers that could be dissociated under reducing conditions and appeared to be well-defined rather than general protein aggregates. This observation is consistent with the notion that the P1182R amino acid substitution derails collagen-I proteostasis by interfering with Ca21 binding [22], which we recently showed is a key early noncovalent assembly step on the pathway to formation of heterotrimers with C-Proa1(I) [10]

  • We studied the folding, misfolding, processing, and interactome of collagen-I C-Pro domains in cells using a biochemically amenable system in which C-Pro domains were expressed in the absence of their associated triple-helical domains

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Summary

Introduction

Proper folding and assembly of collagen is critical for maintaining the structural integrity of extracellular matrices [1,2,3]. Studies of C-Proa(I) variants in primary patient cells confirmed that the resulting misfolding can cause aberrant collagen-I trafficking [18].

Results
Conclusion

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