Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.335, No.3, 749-755, 2005
Single amino acid substitutions in the C-terminus of collagen II alter its affinity for collagen IX
The structural integrity of cartilage depends on the presence of extracellular matrices (ECM) formed by heterotypic fibrils composed of collagen II, collagen IX, and collagen XI. The formation of these fibrils depends on the site-specific binding between relatively small regions of interacting collagen molecules. Single amino acid substitutions in collagen II change the physicochemical and structural characteristics of those sites, thereby leading to an alteration of intermolecular collagen II/collagen IX interaction. Employing a biosensor to study interactions between R75C, R789C or G853E collagen II mutants and collagen IX, we demonstrated significant changes in the binding affinities. Moreover, analyses of computer models representing mutation sites defined exact changes in physicochemical characteristics of collagen 11 mutants. Our study shows that changes in collagen II/collagen IX affinity could represent one of the steps in a cascade of changes occurring in the ECM of cartilage as a result of single amino acid substitutions in collagen II. (C) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:extracellular matrix of connective tissue;collagen II;collagen IX;collagen mutations;chondrodysplasias;biosensor