Collagen

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=== Inter-tropocollagen Attractions ===
=== Inter-tropocollagen Attractions ===
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Hydrogen bonds are also an important inter-tropocollagen force which holds the tropocollagens together in the fiber segment. As shown above, <font color="gold">Hyp</font> is the outer most residue on the <scene name='Collagen/Pros_position_tropo/1'>surface</scene> of the triple helix, and the hydroxyl groups are the atoms that extend out the most from the surface. The hydrogen bonds are formed between the hydroxyl hydrogen of a Hyp and a backbone carbonyl oxygen. As the peptides in a tropocollagen twist about each other they come into <scene name='Collagen/Hlite_c_k_peptides/1'>close contact</scene> with particular peptides in adjacent tropocollagens and then move away from them. The two peptide highlighted in spacefill are located in two different tropocollagens. Notice that in this case, they make contact with each other in the middle of the strands, and a hydrogen bond is located at this point of contact. The <scene name='Collagen/Inter-hbonds1/2'>hydrogen bond</scene> consist of the oxygen of a carbonyl of a Hyp in a <font bold="" color="blue"><strong>peptide</strong></font> of one tropocollagen and the hydroxyl hydrogen of a Hyp in a <font color="gold"><strong>peptide</strong></font> of another tropocollagen. Another example shows <scene name='Collagen/Hlite_k_o/1'>two peptides</scene> from two different tropocollagens making contact at the ends of the fiber segment, and of course it is within these regions where the inter-tropocollagen attractions occur. At one end a <scene name='Collagen/Inter-hbond2/4'>hydrogen bond</scene> is formed between a hydrogen of Hyp in one <font color="gold"><strong>peptide</strong></font> and an oxygen of a Gly carbonyl in the second <font color="red"><strong>peptide</strong></font>. At the other end of the two peptides a <scene name='Collagen/Inter-hbond3/2'>Hyp carbonyl oxygen</scene> donates its electrons to a Hyp hydroxyl hydrogen. Show the <scene name='Collagen/2nd_view_hbond3/2'>hydrogen bond</scene> in the context of the six peptides of the two tropocollagens. The above examples of hydrogen bonding illustrate that Hyp plays a central role in maintaining the structures of both the tropocollagen and the collagen fiber. Without the proper amount of vitamin C in their diets humans can not make Hyp, and therefore can not make stable collagen and strong bones.
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Hydrogen bonds are also an important inter-tropocollagen force which holds the tropocollagens together in the fiber segment. As shown above, <span style="color:gold;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">Hyp</span> is the outer most residue on the <scene name='Collagen/Pros_position_tropo/1'>surface</scene> of the triple helix, and the hydroxyl groups are the atoms that extend out the most from the surface. The hydrogen bonds are formed between the hydroxyl hydrogen of a Hyp and a backbone carbonyl oxygen. As the peptides in a tropocollagen twist about each other they come into <scene name='Collagen/Hlite_c_k_peptides/1'>close contact</scene> with particular peptides in adjacent tropocollagens and then move away from them. The two peptide highlighted in spacefill are located in two different tropocollagens. Notice that in this case, they make contact with each other in the middle of the strands, and a hydrogen bond is located at this point of contact. The <scene name='Collagen/Inter-hbonds1/2'>hydrogen bond</scene> consist of the oxygen of a carbonyl of a Hyp in a <font bold="" color="blue"><strong>peptide</strong></font> of one tropocollagen and the hydroxyl hydrogen of a Hyp in a <span style="color:gold;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">peptide</span> of another tropocollagen. Another example shows <scene name='Collagen/Hlite_k_o/1'>two peptides</scene> from two different tropocollagens making contact at the ends of the fiber segment, and of course it is within these regions where the inter-tropocollagen attractions occur. At one end a <scene name='Collagen/Inter-hbond2/4'>hydrogen bond</scene> is formed between a hydrogen of Hyp in one <span style="color:gold;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">peptide</span> and an oxygen of a Gly carbonyl in the second <font color="red"><strong>peptide</strong></font>. At the other end of the two peptides a <scene name='Collagen/Inter-hbond3/2'>Hyp carbonyl oxygen</scene> donates its electrons to a Hyp hydroxyl hydrogen. Show the <scene name='Collagen/2nd_view_hbond3/2'>hydrogen bond</scene> in the context of the six peptides of the two tropocollagens. The above examples of hydrogen bonding illustrate that Hyp plays a central role in maintaining the structures of both the tropocollagen and the collagen fiber. Without the proper amount of vitamin C in their diets humans can not make Hyp, and therefore can not make stable collagen and strong bones.

Revision as of 10:26, 27 October 2011

Structure of Collagen (PDB entry 4clg or 1cag)

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PDB ID 4clg

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PDB ID 1cag

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Gly Packing in 4clg ()
Ala Packing in 1cag (Mutated Collagen) ()


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 June 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 – 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

  1. J.M. Chen, C.E. Kung, S.H. Feairheller, E.M. Brown, AN ENERGETIC EVALUATION OF A "SMITH" COLLAGEN MICROFIBRIL MODEL, J. Protein Chem., 10, 535, 1991
  2. J.BELLA,M.EATON,B.BRODSKY,H.M.BERMAN, CRYSTAL AND MOLECULAR STRUCTURE OF A COLLAGEN-LIKE PEPTIDE AT 1.9 A RESOLUTION. SCIENCE, 266, 75, 1994

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.

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