Characterization of human type II procollagen and collagen-specific antibodies and their application to the study of human type II collagen processing and ultrastructure

Type II collagen is the most abundant collagen in articular cartilage and, together with other tissue-specific collagens and proteoglycans, provides the tissue with its shock-absorbing properties and its resiliency to stress. Specific antibodies which recognize various collagen types have been very...

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Veröffentlicht in:Matrix biology 1997-04, Vol.16 (1), p.29-39
Hauptverfasser: Jimenez, Sergio A., Ala-Kokko, Leena, Prockop, Darwin J., Merryman, Carmen F., Shepard, Nora, Dodge, George R.
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 29
container_title Matrix biology
container_volume 16
creator Jimenez, Sergio A.
Ala-Kokko, Leena
Prockop, Darwin J.
Merryman, Carmen F.
Shepard, Nora
Dodge, George R.
description Type II collagen is the most abundant collagen in articular cartilage and, together with other tissue-specific collagens and proteoglycans, provides the tissue with its shock-absorbing properties and its resiliency to stress. Specific antibodies which recognize various collagen types have been very useful in the study of collagen biosynthesis, structure and metabolism in normal and pathological conditins. Antibodies which recognize epitopes of type II collagen have been described previously; however, many of these antibodies display cross-reactivity with other collages or with type II collagen from other species, reflecting the high degree of homology of the helical domains of fibrillar collagens. In this study, we prepared antibodies to sequential determinants of human type II procollagen employing synthetic peptides with sequences deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the human α1(II) procollagen cDNA. The antibodies were highly specific for epitopes in either the C-terminal propeptide or the telopeptide of the human type II collagen and did not cross-react with other human interstitial collagens or with murine type II collagen. These antibodies were used in conjunction with biosynthetic labeling to study the secretion and processing of human type II procollagen and collagen in human chondrocytes in vitro. The results indicated that a lag period of about 90 min was required for the secretion of newly synthesized type II procollagen. Conversion of the secreted procollagen into fully processed α-chains and their deposition in the cell layer were first apparent 240 min following the intitiation of biosynthetic labeling. The antibodies were also used to examine, by immunoelectron microscopy, the structure of the extracellular matrix produced by human chondrocytes maintained in long-term cultures under conditions which permit the preservation of the cartilage-specific phenotype. These highly specific antibodies provide valuable tools to study the metabolism and structure of human type II procollagen and collagen in normal and pathologic conditions.
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Specific antibodies which recognize various collagen types have been very useful in the study of collagen biosynthesis, structure and metabolism in normal and pathological conditins. Antibodies which recognize epitopes of type II collagen have been described previously; however, many of these antibodies display cross-reactivity with other collages or with type II collagen from other species, reflecting the high degree of homology of the helical domains of fibrillar collagens. In this study, we prepared antibodies to sequential determinants of human type II procollagen employing synthetic peptides with sequences deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the human α1(II) procollagen cDNA. The antibodies were highly specific for epitopes in either the C-terminal propeptide or the telopeptide of the human type II collagen and did not cross-react with other human interstitial collagens or with murine type II collagen. These antibodies were used in conjunction with biosynthetic labeling to study the secretion and processing of human type II procollagen and collagen in human chondrocytes in vitro. The results indicated that a lag period of about 90 min was required for the secretion of newly synthesized type II procollagen. Conversion of the secreted procollagen into fully processed α-chains and their deposition in the cell layer were first apparent 240 min following the intitiation of biosynthetic labeling. The antibodies were also used to examine, by immunoelectron microscopy, the structure of the extracellular matrix produced by human chondrocytes maintained in long-term cultures under conditions which permit the preservation of the cartilage-specific phenotype. 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Specific antibodies which recognize various collagen types have been very useful in the study of collagen biosynthesis, structure and metabolism in normal and pathological conditins. Antibodies which recognize epitopes of type II collagen have been described previously; however, many of these antibodies display cross-reactivity with other collages or with type II collagen from other species, reflecting the high degree of homology of the helical domains of fibrillar collagens. In this study, we prepared antibodies to sequential determinants of human type II procollagen employing synthetic peptides with sequences deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the human α1(II) procollagen cDNA. The antibodies were highly specific for epitopes in either the C-terminal propeptide or the telopeptide of the human type II collagen and did not cross-react with other human interstitial collagens or with murine type II collagen. 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ispartof Matrix biology, 1997-04, Vol.16 (1), p.29-39
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source MEDLINE; Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects Amino Acid Sequence
Antibody Specificity
Cartilage - chemistry
Cartilage - cytology
Cartilage - immunology
Cells, Cultured
Collagen - chemistry
Collagen - ultrastructure
collagen-specific antibodies
Human type II collagen
human type II procollagen
Humans
Kinetics
Microscopy, Immunoelectron
Molecular Sequence Data
Phenotype
Procollagen - analysis
Procollagen - immunology
Procollagen - physiology
Species Specificity
title Characterization of human type II procollagen and collagen-specific antibodies and their application to the study of human type II collagen processing and ultrastructure
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