Collagen
From Proteopedia
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=== Primary Structure of Peptide === | === Primary Structure of Peptide === | ||
| - | <scene name='Collagen/One_peptide_wireframe/ | + | <scene name='Collagen/One_peptide_wireframe/4'>Show side chains</scene> of the peptide in wireframe display. Identify the amino acids making up the peptide by resting the cursor on a residue and observing the name in the label (Toggling spin off will make this easier.). Which three amino acids are present in the peptide in a reocurring pattern? Collagen is characterized by a distinctive repeating sequence: (Gly-X-Y)n where X is often Pro, Y is usually 5-hydroxyproline (Hyp), and n may be >300. The model ([[4clg]]) being studied here contains a <scene name='Collagen/One_peptide_tricolored/3'>repeating sequence</scene> of residues - <font color="#ff0000">Gly</font>-<span style="color:limegreen;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">Pro</span>-<span style="color:yellow;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">Hyp</span>. This sequence produces a conformation which is a <scene name='Collagen/One_peptide_backbone/1'>left-handed helix</scene> with a rise 10.0 Å/turn or <scene name='Collagen/Peptide_3_residue_segments/1'>3.3 residues per turn</scene>, the peptide is colored in three residue segments. <scene name='Collagen/Peptide_helix_z_axis/1'>Looking down</scene> the center axis of a segment of the helix. Since a helix with a larger rise is superimposed on the helix described above, the entire center axis does not align for viewing. The <scene name='Collagen/Ramachandran/2'>Ramachandran plot</scene> shows that the psi and phi angles of the collagen helix are different from the α-helix, which has a rise of 3.6. The two clusters shown here are outside of the area expected for an α-helix. Review where you would expect a cluster of [[Ramachandran_Plots|α-helix]] residues to be located. |
=== Other Levels of Structure === | === Other Levels of Structure === | ||
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As shown above tropocollagen is formed by <scene name='Collagen/One_tropocollagen/1'>three peptides</scene> twisting around each other, and in doing so the peptides make <scene name='Collagen/Peptide_3_residue_segments2/2'>one turn every ~7 three-residue repeats</scene> (Cyan colored residues mark the approximate length of one turn.). <scene name='Collagen/One_tropocollagen2/1'>Three cyan colored residues</scene> mark the approximate distance of one turn of the peptides in a tropocollagen. Tropocollagen displayed as <scene name='Collagen/One_tropocollagen_backbone2/1'>backbone only</scene> clearly shows both types of helical turns - the 3.3 residue/turn and ~21 residue/turn. | As shown above tropocollagen is formed by <scene name='Collagen/One_tropocollagen/1'>three peptides</scene> twisting around each other, and in doing so the peptides make <scene name='Collagen/Peptide_3_residue_segments2/2'>one turn every ~7 three-residue repeats</scene> (Cyan colored residues mark the approximate length of one turn.). <scene name='Collagen/One_tropocollagen2/1'>Three cyan colored residues</scene> mark the approximate distance of one turn of the peptides in a tropocollagen. Tropocollagen displayed as <scene name='Collagen/One_tropocollagen_backbone2/1'>backbone only</scene> clearly shows both types of helical turns - the 3.3 residue/turn and ~21 residue/turn. | ||
| - | Looking down the axis of a tropocollagen displayed as wireframe, <font color="#ff0000">glycine</font> can be seen <scene name='Collagen/Gly_position_tropo/2'>positioned in the center</scene> of the triple helix. The two types of helical turns consistently positions the Gly in the center of the triple helix. <span style="color:limegreen;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">Proline</span> and the <span style="color: | + | Looking down the axis of a tropocollagen displayed as wireframe, <font color="#ff0000">glycine</font> can be seen <scene name='Collagen/Gly_position_tropo/2'>positioned in the center</scene> of the triple helix. The two types of helical turns consistently positions the Gly in the center of the triple helix. <span style="color:limegreen;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">Proline</span> and the <span style="color:yellow;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">hydroxyproline</span> are on the <scene name='Collagen/Pros_position_tropo/1'>outside</scene> of the triple helix. With the hydroxyl group of Hyp extending to the surface of the triple helix, it can be involved in hydrogen bond formation, as will be seen in the next section. The cyclical side chains of Pro and Hyp are some what rigid, and this rigidity adds to the stability of the collagen fiber. The primary structure of repeating Gly-Pro-Hyp along with the two types of helical turns determine the 3D positions of Gly, Pro and Hyp in the tropocollagen. |
In order to make a compact strong fiber the interior residues of the triple helix need to be close packed. The <scene name='Collagen/Gly_no_hindrance/1'>Gly side chain</scene> is the only one small enough to accommodate this close packing in the interior of the triple helix (realize that in this model the hydrogen on the <span style="color:limegreen;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">α carbon</span> is not displayed). <scene name='Collagen/Glys_close_pack/1'>Three Gly</scene>, one on each of three different chains, are close packed together. The gray atoms of the yellow and lime Gly are the α-carbons, and only a hydrogen could fit between these carbons and the atoms of the adjacent Gly. <scene name='Collagen/Glys_pro_close/2'>A Pro</scene> on each of the 3 chains are shown close packed to the three Gly (lime, cyan, yellow). Adding the <scene name='Collagen/Glys_pro_hyp/1'>Hyp</scene> shows that Pro and Hyp are tightly positioned around the small interior Gly leaving no space for side chains longer than the single hydrogen of Gly. | In order to make a compact strong fiber the interior residues of the triple helix need to be close packed. The <scene name='Collagen/Gly_no_hindrance/1'>Gly side chain</scene> is the only one small enough to accommodate this close packing in the interior of the triple helix (realize that in this model the hydrogen on the <span style="color:limegreen;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">α carbon</span> is not displayed). <scene name='Collagen/Glys_close_pack/1'>Three Gly</scene>, one on each of three different chains, are close packed together. The gray atoms of the yellow and lime Gly are the α-carbons, and only a hydrogen could fit between these carbons and the atoms of the adjacent Gly. <scene name='Collagen/Glys_pro_close/2'>A Pro</scene> on each of the 3 chains are shown close packed to the three Gly (lime, cyan, yellow). Adding the <scene name='Collagen/Glys_pro_hyp/1'>Hyp</scene> shows that Pro and Hyp are tightly positioned around the small interior Gly leaving no space for side chains longer than the single hydrogen of Gly. | ||
Revision as of 15:47, 5 October 2012
Collagen, the most abundant protein in vertebrates, is an extracellular, inextensible fibrous protein that comprises the major protein component of such stress-bearing structures as bones, tendons, and ligaments. As with all fibrous proteins collagen is, for the most part, characterized by highly repetitive simple sequence. Here we study two model compounds (The structure of 4clg[1] is shown in the applet to the right.) for naturally occurring collagen, in order to develop an understanding of the fibrous portion of collagen and to show how the different levels of protein structure come together and form a highly ordered and stable fiber. Collagen's properties of rigidity and inextensibility are due to this highly ordered structure. The part of collagen without structural order is not illustrated in this model. This part of the protein complex having a different amino acid composition, lysine and hydroxylysine are particularly important residues, is globular in nature and not as structurally organized. Lysine and hydroxylysine form covalent crosslinks in the protein complex, thereby adding strength and some flexibility to the fiber. This covalent crosslinking continues throughout life and produces a more rigid collagen and brittle bones in older adults. Go to Collagen Structure & Function for information on the functions and disorders of collagen and a link in the External Links section of this page for assembly movies of the triple helix of types I and IV.
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In order to convince yourself that there is a difference in the interchain distances in the area of the Ala, between Gly (Ala) and Pro which form intratropocollagen hydrogen bonds. Hydrogen bonds are not formed between Ala and Pro because the distances between the atoms forming the bonds are too great. The absence of the intratropocollagen hydrogen bonds, which is due to replacing Gly with a residue having a longer side chain, disrupts collagen's rope-like structure and is responsible for the symptoms of such human diseases as osteogenesis imperfecta and certain Ehlers-Danlos syndromes.
3D structures of collagen
Update November 2011
3hqv, 3hr2 – Col I – rat – fiber diffraction
1q7d - hCol I α1 integrin-binding domain – human
1u5m - hCol II α1 (mutant)
3dmw - hCol III α1
1li1 - hCol IV α Nc1 domain
1t60, 1t61, 1m3d - Col IV α Nc1 domain – bovine
1kth - hCol III α3 Kunitz type domain
1kun - hCol III α3 Kunitz type domain – NMR
2knt, 1knt - hCol VI Kunitz type domain
1o91 - mCol VIII α1 Nc1 domain - mouse
2uur - hCol IX α1 Nc4 domain
1gr3 - hCol X α1 Nc1 domain
1b9p, 1b9q - Col IX α1 Nc4 domain (mutant)
3n3f – hCol XIV Nc1 domain
1dy2 - mCol XV endostatin domain
3hon, 3hsh - hCol XVIII tetramerization domain
1bnl - hCol XVIII C terminal domain
1dy0, 1dy1 - mCol XVIII endostatin domain
2ekj, 2ee3 - hCol XX α1 fn3 domain
2dkm - hCol XX α1 fn3 domain - NMR
3ipn – Col modified
1wzb, 1itt, 1k6f – Col triple helix
1zpx, 1sp7, 1sop – Col mini – hydra – NMR
2cuo, 2d3f, 2d3h, 2g66 – Col model peptides
Collagen complex with binding proteins
3ejh, 3gxe – hCol I α1 C-terminal + fibronectin
2fse – hCol II + MHC HLA-DR1
2seb - hCol II + MHC HLA-DR4
2v53 - hCol III α1 + Sparc
2wuh – hCol + discoidin domain receptor 2
1dzi – Col + integrin α2 domain
2f6a – Col + Col adhesin
References
External Links
Movies of assembly of triple helix of type I and IV collagen.
Contributor
Much of the content of this page was taken from an earlier non-Proteopedia version of Collagen which was in large part developed by Gretchen Heide Bisbort, a 1999 graduate of Messiah College.
Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)
Karl Oberholser, Alexander Berchansky, Michal Harel, Ala Jelani, Jaime Prilusky, Eric Martz, Eran Hodis, David Canner, Judy Voet, Tilman Schirmer
