A possible role for dehydrodihydroxylysinonorleucine in collagen fibre and bundle formation
- 1 March 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 177 (3), 853-860
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1770853
Abstract
The concentrations of NaB3H4-reducible collagen cross-links were determined at the time when collagen fibres and bundles are observed in electron micrographs of connective tissue developing around the implanted Ivalon sponge in adult male rats. The highest radioactivity occurs with hydroxylysinonoreleucine and histidinohydroxymerodesmosine, and the lowest with lysinonorleucine, the reducible amounts of these cross-links remaining relatively constant as fibres and bundles appear. On the other hand, dihydroxylysinonorleucine amounts are low during the initial stages of connective-tissue formation and rise sharply as collagen fibres and bundles develop and collagen matures, as shown by increased resistance of insoluble collagen to digestion with bacterial collagenase. The bulk of hydroxylysinonorleucine and dihydroxylysinonorleucine is glycosylated, the former with galactosyl or glucosylgalactosyl residues and the latter with glucosylgalactosyl residues. The changing relationships between the amounts of 3H-labelled hydroxylysinonorleucine, glucosylgalactosyldihydroxylysinonorleucine and non-glycosylated dihydroxylysinonorleucine as fibres and bundles appear suggest three post-translational steps involving lysyl-derived cross-links in the organization of collagen into fibres and bundles.This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interaction Between Collagen Type I and Type III in Conditioning Bundles OrganizationConnective Tissue Research, 1977
- Isolation of a Crosslinked Cyanogen‐Bromide Peptide from Insoluble Rabbit Collagen Tissue Differences in Hydroxylation and Glycosylation of the CrosslinkEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1976
- Comparative Electron-Microscope Studies on Type-III and Type-I CollagensEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1975
- Isolation and characterization of glycosyl derivatives of the reducible cross‐links in collagensFEBS Letters, 1974
- The stability of collagen cross-links when derived from hydroxylysyl residuesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1973
- Relative stabilities of the intermediate reducible crosslinks present in collagen fibresFEBS Letters, 1973
- Analysis of a crosslinked peptide from calf bone collagen: Evidence that hydroxylysyl glycoside participates in the crosslinkBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1973
- In vitro formation of intermolecular crosslinks in chick skin collagen. II. KineticsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1970
- Isolation and structural identification of a labile intermolecular crosslink in collagenBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1968
- Collagen reduction by sodium borohydride: Effects of reconstitution, maturation and lathyrismBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1968