Abstract
BackgroundCollagens provide structural support and guidance cues within the extracellular matrix of metazoans. Mammalian collagens XIII, XXIII and XXV form a unique subgroup of type II transmembrane proteins, each comprising a short N-terminal cytosolic domain, a transmembrane domain and a largely collagenous ectodomain. We name these collagens as MACITs (Membrane-Associated Collagens with Interrupted Triple-helices), and here investigate their evolution and conserved properties. To date, these collagens have been studied only in mammals. Knowledge of the representation of MACITs in other extant metazoans is lacking. This question is of interest for understanding structural/functional relationships in the MACIT family and also for insight into the evolution of MACITs in relation to the secreted, fibrillar collagens that are present throughout the metazoa.ResultsMACITs are restricted to bilaterians and are represented in the Ecdysozoa, Hemichordata, Urochordata and Vertebrata (Gnathostomata). They were not identified in available early-diverging metazoans, Lophotrochozoa, Echinodermata, Cephalochordata or Vertebrata (Cyclostomata). Whereas invertebrates encode a single MACIT, collagens XIII/XXIII/XXV of jawed vertebrates are paralogues that originated from the two rounds of en-bloc genome duplication occurring early in vertebrate evolution. MACITs have conserved domain architecture in which a juxta-membrane furin-cleavage site and the C-terminal 34 residues are especially highly conserved, whereas the cytoplasmic domains are weakly conserved. To study protein expression and function in a metazoan with a single MACIT gene, we focused on Caenorhabditis elegans and its col-99 gene. A col-99 cDNA was cloned and expressed as protein in mammalian CHO cells, two antibodies against COL-99 protein were generated, and a col-99-bearing fosmid gene construct col-99::egfp::flag was used to generate transgenic C. elegans lines. The encoded COL-99 polypeptide is 85 kDa in size and forms a trimeric protein. COL-99 is plasma membrane-associated and undergoes furin-dependent ectodomain cleavage and shedding. COL-99 is detected in mouth, pharynx, body wall and the tail, mostly in motor neurons and muscle systems and is enriched at neuromuscular junctions.ConclusionsThrough identification of MACITs in multiple metazoan phyla we developed a model for the evolution of MACITs. The experimental data demonstrate conservation of MACIT molecular and cellular properties and tissue localisations in the invertebrate, C. elegans.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0554-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Collagens provide structural support and guidance cues within the extracellular matrix of metazoans
With regard to our goal of searching for membrane-associated collagens with interrupted triple-helices (MACIT) proteins in other metazoans, our criteria for the identification of proteins related to collagens XIII, XXIII and XXV included: a) a predicted type II transmembrane topology; b) the presence of interrupted collagen triple helical regions in the predicted protein ectodomain, and c) sequence conservation of the Cterminal region motif including the cysteine residues
We identify that the MACIT transmembrane collagens are widespread in bilaterians, yet have been lost from multiple lineages
Summary
Collagens provide structural support and guidance cues within the extracellular matrix of metazoans. Mammalian collagens XIII, XXIII and XXV form a unique subgroup of type II transmembrane proteins, each comprising a short N-terminal cytosolic domain, a transmembrane domain and a largely collagenous ectodomain We name these collagens as MACITs (Membrane-Associated Collagens with Interrupted Triple-helices), and here investigate their evolution and conserved properties. The extracellular matrix (ECM) of metazoans is an intricate, proteinaceous meshwork that underlies all epithelia and endothelia, and surrounds all connective tissue cells It promotes cell adhesion, migration, differentiation and proliferation, and provides a supporting structure to which cells adhere. Among the 28 collagen types known in mammals, collagens XIII, XXIII and XXV form a subgroup of structurally related collagens that have, so far, been studied only in mammals
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