Abstract

Proline residues in collagens are extensively hydroxylated post-translationally. A rare form of this modification, (3S,2S)-l-hydroxyproline (3Hyp), remains without a clear function. Disruption of the enzyme complex responsible for prolyl 3-hydroxylation results in severe forms of recessive osteogenesis imperfecta (OI). These OI types exhibit a loss of or reduction in the level of 3-hydroxylation at two proline residues, α1(I) Pro986 and α2(I) Pro707. Whether the resulting brittle bone phenotype is caused by the lack of the 3-hydroxyl addition or by another function of the enzyme complex is unknown. We have speculated that the most efficient mechanism for explaining the chemistry of collagen intermolecular cross-linking is for pairs of collagen molecules in register to be the subunit that assembles into fibrils. In this concept, the exposed hydroxyls from 3Hyp are positioned within mutually interactive binding motifs on adjacent collagen molecules that contribute through hydrogen bonding to the process of fibril supramolecular assembly. Here we report observations on the physical binding properties of 3Hyp in collagen chains from experiments designed to explore the potential for interaction using synthetic collagen-like peptides containing 3Hyp. Evidence of self-association was observed between a synthetic peptide containing 3Hyp and the CB6 domain of the α1(I) chain, which contains the single fully 3-hydroxylated proline. Using collagen from a case of severe recessive OI with a CRTAP defect, in which Pro986 was minimally 3-hydroxylated, such binding was not observed. Further study of the role of 3Hyp in supramolecular assembly is warranted for understanding the evolution of tissue-specific variations in collagen fibril organization.

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