Abstract

Five types of collagen with triple-helical regions approximately 300 nm in length were found in lamprey tissues which show characteristic D-periodic collagen fibrils. These collagens are members of the fibril forming family of this primitive vertebrate. Lamprey collagens were characterized with respect to solubility, mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, carboxylmethyl-cellulose chromatography, peptide digestion patterns, composition, susceptibility to vertebrate collagenase, thermal stability, and segment long spacing-banding pattern. Comparison with fibril-forming collagens in higher vertebrates (types I, II, III, V, and XI) identified three lamprey collagens as types II, V, and XI. Both lamprey dermis and major body wall collagens had properties similar to type I but not the typical heterotrimer composition. Dermis molecules had only alpha 1(I)-like chains, while body wall molecules had alpha 2(I)-like chains combined with chains resembling lamprey type II. Neither collagen exhibited the interchain disulfide linkages or solubility properties of type III. The conservation of fibril organization in type II/type XI tissues in contrast to the major developments in type I and type III tissues after the divergence of lamprey and higher vertebrates is consistent with these results. The presence of type II and type I-like molecules as major collagens and types V and XI as minor collagens in the lamprey, and the differential susceptibility of these molecules to vertebrate collagenase is analogous to the findings in higher vertebrates.

Highlights

  • From the $Department of Biochemistry and the §Department of Pathology, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New JerseyRobert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854

  • We report here the collagens present in three tissues of the after thedivergence of lamprey and higher vertebrateslamprey which contain D-periodic collagen fibrils:the dermis, is consistent with these results

  • We report the characterization of collagens in the dermis, for the a component, the B dimers must not include one chain body wall, and notochord of the lamprey

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Summary

OF BIOLOGICAL

1988 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Joanne Kelly$, Shizuko TanakaS, Thomas Hardtl, EricF. D-periodic fibrils containing moleson with fibril-formingcollagens in higher vertebrates (types I, 11, 111, V, and XI) identified three lamprey cules with a characteristic distributionof charged residues are collagens as types 11, V, and XI. The family of collagen molecules in higher animals with uninterrupted (Gly-X-Y), triple-helical regions300 nm in length and with the capacity to aggregate into fibrils with an axial period of D = 67 nm includes five distinct types of collagens: types I, 11, 111, V, and XI ( l a , 201, 3a) [1,2,3]. These five collagens have been designated the fibril-forming or group.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Collagens in
Glutamic acid
Human skin'
Fraction Number
Notochord Collagen
DISCUSSION
Findings
Human cartilage*
Full Text
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