Collagen XII: Protecting bone and muscle integrity by organizing collagen fibrils

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Abstract

Collagen XII, largest member of the fibril-associated collagens with interrupted triple helix (FACIT) family, assembles from three identical α-chains encoded by the COL12A1 gene. The molecule consists of three threadlike N-terminal noncollagenous NC3 domains, joined by disulfide bonds and a short interrupted collagen triple helix toward the C-terminus. Splice variants differ considerably in size and properties: "small" collagen XIIB (220 kDa subunit) is similar to collagen XIV, whereas collagen XIIA (350 kDa) has a much larger NC3 domain carrying glycosaminoglycan chains. Collagen XII binds to collagen I-containing fibrils via its collagenous domain, whereas its large noncollagenous arms interact with other matrix proteins such as tenascin-X. In dense connective tissues and bone, collagen XII is thought to regulate organization and mechanical properties of collagen fibril bundles. Accordingly, recent findings show that collagen XII mutations cause Ehlers-Danlos/myopathy overlap syndrome associated with skeletal abnormalities and muscle weakness in mice and humans. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.

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Chiquet, M., Birk, D. E., Bönnemann, C. G., & Koch, M. (2014). Collagen XII: Protecting bone and muscle integrity by organizing collagen fibrils. International Journal of Biochemistry and Cell Biology. Elsevier Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocel.2014.04.020

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