Studies on type I procollagen produced by skin fibroblasts cultured from twins with lethal type II of osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) showed that biosynthesis of collagen (measured by L-[5-3H]proline incorporation into proteins susceptible to the action of bacterial collagenase) was slightly increased as compared to the control healthy infant. SDS/PAGE showed that the fibroblasts synthesized and secreted only normal type I procollagen. Electrophoretic analysis of collagen chains and CNBr peptides showed the same pattern of electrophoretic migration as in the controls. The lack of posttranslational overmodification of the collagen molecule suggested a molecular defect near the amino terminus of the collagen helix. Digestion of OI type I collagen with trypsin at 30°C for 5 min generated a shorter than normal α2 chain which melted at 36°C. Direct sequencing of an asymmetric PCR product revealed a heterozygous single nucleotide change C→G causing a substitution of histidine by aspartic acid in the α2 chain at position 92. Pericellular processing of type I procollagen by the twin's fibroblasts yielded a later appearance of the intermediate pC-α1(I) form as compared with control cells.
CITATION STYLE
Galicka, A., Wołczyński, S., & Gindzieński, A. (2003). Studies on type I collagen in skin fibroblasts cultured from twins with lethal osteogenesis imperfecta. Acta Biochimica Polonica, 50(2), 481–488. https://doi.org/10.18388/abp.2003_3700
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