Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P00790 (PGA)
2,475 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mouse antibodies to soluble bovine skin (type I) collagen react with determinants which are located in the rigid triple-helical portion of the antigen and become destroyed upon unfolding the molecule. Helical antigenic determinants are dependent on the genuine chain assembly, e.g. alpha[1(I)]2alpha2. Artefactual triplehelical structures of the composition [alpha1(I)]3 or [alpha2]3 or a genetically distinct type II collagen from cartilage showed no or only weak cross-reactivity. Pepsin treatment of type I collagen known to remove short, non-helical sequences at both ends of the molecule had virtually no effect on antigenicity and immunogenic activity. A radioimmunoassay failed to detect antibodies in three congenic resistant mouse strains immunized with denatured type I collagen. These strains had been previously classified as high or low responders to native type I collagen. Agglutination titres vs denatured collagen culd already be demonstrated in nonimmune sera. The agglutinating activity was labile against heating at 56 degrees and could not be increased by immunization. Two out of five inbred strains showed a high response against pepsin-dissolved bovine type II collagen with the chain composition [alpha1(II)]3. Lack of correlation in the responder state to both collagen types indicated control by different immune response genes. Antibodies to type II collagen also reacted against triple-helical antigenic determinants and showed neglible cross-reaction with type I collagen.
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PMID:Specificity of the antibody response in inbred mice to bovine type I and type II collagen. 5 15

Porcine aortae were digested with pepsin and the solubilised collagen molecules separated by differential salt precipitation at pH7.5. The fraction precipitated at 1.71 M NaCl was shown to comprise collagen type III as judged by its elution characteristics from CM-cellulose, its alpha-chain composition on sodium dodeclysulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and amino acid analyses. Pepsin-derived type I collagen was recovered by precipitation at 2.56 M NaCl and similarly characterised. cultures of porcine arterial smooth muscle cells have been established and radiolabelling studies with [14Clproline have demonstrated that these cells synthesis and secrete the precursors of collagen types I and III into the culture medium. Ion-exchange chromatography of these secreted collagen molecules and gel filtration of their pepsin-derived alpha-chains have demonstrated that type III is the major collagen species present in the medium.
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PMID:Characterisation of the major collagen species present in porcine aortae and the synthesis of their precursors by smooth muscle cells in culture. 14 63

Sequential extraction of mature rabbit corneal stroma with NaCl-Tris buffer and acetic acid solubilized only 12% of the total corneal collagen. Pepsin (E:S 1:10,4 degrees C, 48 hr) in 0.4 M acetic acid solubilized 91% to 95% of the total collagen in the residue. Approximately 68% of the solubilized material could be precipitated at 2.5M NaCl and a further 3% to 9% at 3.5M NaCl. The collagenous material precipitating at 2.5M NaCl contained alpha, beta, gamma, and some higher molecular weight components and had a CNBr profile similar to bovine type I skin collagen. It had an hydroxylysine/lysine (OHLys/Lys) ratio of 0.43, similar to that of skin collagen, but unlike skin collagen was 52% glycosyled. Although the 3.5M NaCl precipitate had a CNBr peptide profile similar to that of type I collagen, it contained two additional collagen chains of molecular weight approximately 140,000 and 100,000 daltons, had an OHLys/Lys ratio of 0.62, and was 66% glycosylated. Individual chains were separated from the collagen precipitates by gel electrophoresis,and the additional collagen chains were shown to be carbohydrate rich. These additional collagen chains may be derived from one or more molecular species which are physiologically important in the maintenance of the unique organization of corneal collagen.
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PMID:Collagen polymorphism in mature rabbit cornea. 34 41

Human nucleus pulposus and annulus fibrosus, obtained at autopsy from patients 7-30 years of age, were extracted with 2 M guanidine-HCl (pH 5.82) to remove proteoglycans, then stirred with pepsin in 0.5 M acetic acid, followed by three 24-h extractions with 1 M NaCl (pH 7.5) and one 24-h extraction with 2 M KSCN (potassium thiocyanate) (pH 7.2). Pepsin and NaCl solubilized an average of about 30% of nucleus pulposus collagen and 18% of annulus fibrosus collagen. KSCN extracted a further 34% of nucleus pulposus collagen and only 4% of annulus fibrosus collagen. CM-cellulose chromatography of nucleus and annulus collagen purified from the pepsin, NaCl and KSCN supernatants consistently revealed only one peak, always appearing slightly ahead of the alpha1 position for rat tail tendon type I collagen. Polyacrylamide and SDS-gel electrophoresis consistently revealed only one band with the mobility of alpha1 chains. Amino acid composition of collagen from nucleus and annulus is comparable to those of mammalian and avian cartilage type II collagen, and distinctly different from those of rat tail tendonand guinea pig skin type I collagens. Periodate oxidation of nucleus and annulus collagens showed that 81% and 67%, respectively, of the hydroxylysine residues survive treatment, compared to 71% for bovine articular cartilage collagen and 17% for guinea pig skin collagen. Total hexose analysis revealed 1.8 muM and 2.0 muM hexose per muM periodate-stable hydroxylysine in nucleus and annulus collagens, respectively. Ion exchange chromatography showed the presence of glucose and galactose in a ratio of 0.92:1 in nucleas collagen and 1.07:1 in annulus collagen. Pepsin-solubilized, NaCl-extracted collagen from nucleus and annulus formed native-type fibrils in vitro. The banding patterns of ATP-induced segment-long-spacing precipitates of nucleus and annulus collagens were identical to each other and indistinguishable from those of cartilage (type II) collagen, but distinctly different from those of rat tail tendon (type I) collagen. These data suggest that the collagen which can be extracted after limited pepsin attack of human nucleus and annulus is of the form [alpha1 (II)]3.
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PMID:Pepsin-solubilized collagen of human nucleus pulposus and annulus fibrosus. 78 25

Selection of ideal laser parameters for tissue welding is inhibited by poor understanding of the mechanism. We investigated structural changes in collagen molecules extracted from rat tail tendon (> 90% type I collagen) after tissue welding using an 808 nm diode laser and indocyanine green dye applied to the weld site. Mobility patterns on SDS-PAGE were identical in the lasered and untreated tendon extracts with urea or acetic acid. Pepsin incubation after acetic acid extraction revealed a reduction of collagen alpha and beta bands in lasered compared with untreated specimens. Circular dichroism studies of rat tail tendon showed absence of helical structure in collagen from lasered tendon. No evidence for covalent bonding was present in laser-treated tissues. Collagen molecules are denatured by the laser wavelength and parameters used in this study. No significant amount of helical structure is regenerated on cooling. We conclude that non-covalent interactions between denatured collagen molecules may be responsible for the creation of tissue welding.
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PMID:Changes in type I collagen following laser welding. 140 2

Pepsin-treated type I collagen fibrils were reconstituted by warming to 37 degrees C in the presence of DOPA at a concentration of 1 x 10(-3)M. Following a 1-1.5-h lag period the "gels" became progressively stabilized as indicated by an inability to disperse these at 0 degrees C. Following 24 h of incubation at 37 degrees C, the DOPA-collagen gels were insoluble in dilute acetic acid even under denaturing conditions. The effect on both gel stability and solubility was concentration-dependent and was maximum at 1 x 10(-3)M. Gel solubility changes were significant, with the greatest change occurring between concentrations of 3.1 x 10(-5)M and 1.65 x 10(-5)M. DOPA exposure did not alter the fibrillar banding pattern seen at the electron microscopic level. Collagen felts prepared by lyophilization of DOPA-collagen gels demonstrated an increase in shrinkage temperature which after 24 h exceeded that of rat tail tendon. Preformed collagen felts incubated for 24 h in the presence of 1 mM DOPA also had a greatly increased shrinkage temperature. Pepsin-treated collagen control felts were altered with respect to control felts in a time dependent manner. The wet tensile strength increased to four times that of control after 3 days of incubation at 37 degrees C. Matrix extensibility initially increased to 1.5 times that of control felts after 4 days of incubation at 37 degrees C, but decreased to below control values following 6 additional days of incubation. These properties suggest that DOPA may be useful as a stabilizing agent of collagen biomedical prostheses.
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PMID:The stabilization of fibrillar collagen matrices with 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine. 191 1

The biosynthesis of type I, type V and type VI collagens was studied by incubation of calf corneas in vitro with [3H]proline as a marker. Pepsin-solubilized collagen types were isolated by salt fractionation and quantified by SDS/PAGE. Expressed as proportions of the total hydroxyproline solubilized, corneal stroma comprised 75% type I, 8% type V and 17% type VI collagen. The rates of [3H]proline incorporation, linear up to 24 h for each collagen type, were highest for type VI collagen and lowest for type I collagen. From pulse-chase experiments, the calculated apparent half-lives for types I, V and VI collagens were 36 h, 10 h and 6 h respectively.
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PMID:Relative rates of biosynthesis of collagen type I, type V and type VI in calf cornea. 200 24

The effect of pepsin solubilization on the platelet aggregating activity of type I collagen and type III collagen was examined. Pepsin-digested type I collagen was unable to initiate platelet aggregation in either soluble form or as pre-formed fibrils. In contrast, pepsin-digested type III collagen was active in soluble form or as preformed fibrils. Mixtures of type I and type III collagen were assayed for platelet aggregating activity. In soluble form, these mixtures demonstrated elevated activity with increasing type III concentration. When the mixtures were tested as pre-formed fibrils, the rate of aggregation was relatively constant with the combination 75% type III and 25% type I manifesting the highest activity. The lag time for onset of aggregation was also minimized for this same type III/type I ratio. The combinations of the two collagen types formed fibrils which reflected the amounts of types I and III collagens in solution.
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PMID:The effect of pepsin solubilization on platelet aggregation by types I and III collagens. 392 48

Quantification and biosynthesis of type I and type III collagens were determined in skin of control and Fraser mice (CatFraser mutation), which exhibit a genetically determined cataract. Skin organ cultures were labelled with [3H]proline. Pepsin-solubilized collagens were studied using three different approaches: (a) differential salt precipitation at neutral pH, followed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; (b) differential salt precipitation at acid pH followed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. (c) CNBr peptide analysis. These methods gave consistent and reproducible results, indicating a selective decrease of type I collagen in Fraser mouse skin as compared to control mouse skin. Metabolic labelling of skin organ cultures showed a decreased specific radioactivity of hydroxy[3H]proline in type I collagen of Fraser mouse skin. The concordant results of these experiments suggest a genetically determined alteration of interstitial collagen metabolism in the Fraser mutation apparently specifically concerning the expression of type I collagen gene(s).
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PMID:Selective decrease of type I collagen synthesis in Fraser mice skin. 393 69

Both the triple-helical and denatured forms of nonfibrillar bovine dermal type I collagen were tested as substrates for the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase in an in vitro reaction. Native, triple-helical collagen was not phosphorylated, but collagen that had been thermally denatured into individual alpha chains was a substrate for the protein kinase. Catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated denatured collagen to between 3 to 4 mol of phosphate/mol of (alpha 1(I)2 alpha 2(I). Pepsin-solubilized and intact collagens were phosphorylated similarly, as long as each was in a nonhelical conformation. The first 2 mol of phosphate incorporated into type I collagen by the protein kinase were present in the alpha 2(I) chain. The alpha 1(I) chain was only phosphorylated during long incubations in which the stoichiometry exceeded 2 mol of phosphate/mol of (alpha 1(I)2 alpha 2(I). Phosphoserine was the only phosphoamino acid identified in collagen that had been phosphorylated to any degree by the protein kinase. The 2 mol of phosphate incorporated into the alpha 2(I) chain were localized to the alpha 2(I)CB4 cyanogen bromide fragment. The catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylated denatured pepsin-solubilized collagen with a Km of 8 microM and a Vmax of approximately 0.1 mumol/min/mg of enzyme. Denatured, but not triple-helical, type I collagen was also phosphorylated by cGMP-dependent protein kinase, although it was a poorer substrate for this enzyme than for the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Collagen was not a substrate for phospholipid-sensitive Ca2+-dependent protein kinase. These results suggest the potential for nascent alpha chains of type I collagen to be susceptible to phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase in vivo prior to triple-helix formation. Such a phosphorylation of collagen could be relevant to the action of cAMP to increase the intracellular degradation of newly synthesized collagen.
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PMID:In vitro phosphorylation of type I collagen by cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. 395 36


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