Publication | Open Access
Glycine to serine substitution in the triple helical domain of pro-α 1 (II) collagen results in a lethal perinatal form of short-limbed dwarfism
154
Citations
15
References
1989
Year
Type Ii CollagenMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsMusculoskeletal ResearchBone Morphogenic ProteinAlpha 1Cartilage DegenerationBiochemical GeneticsMatrix BiologyProteomicsConnective Tissue DiseaseGrowth HormoneTriple Helical DomainMedicineCell BiologyOsteocalcinCollagen ResultsDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesLethal Perinatal FormCellular BiochemistryCartilage TissueExtracellular Matrix
Previous biochemical studies on cartilage tissue from a proband with Type II achondrogenesis-hypochondrogenesis (Godfrey, M., and Hollister, D. W. (1988) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 43, 904-913) indicated heterozygosity for a structural abnormality in the triple helical domain of pro-alpha 1 (II) collagen. Here we demonstrate that the mutation in the type II procollagen gene is a single base change that converts the codon for glycine (GGC) at amino acid 943 of the alpha 1 (II) chain to a codon for serine (AGC). The substitution disrupts the invariant Gly-X-Y structural motif necessary for perfect triple helix formation and leads to extensive overmodification, intracellular retention, and reduced secretion of type II collagen. These findings confirm the proposal that new dominant mutations in the type II procollagen gene may account for some cases of Type II achondrogenesis-hypochondrogenesis. Since recent studies (Lee, B., Vissing, H., Ramirez, F., Rogers, D., and Rimoin, D. (1989) Science 244, 978-980) have identified a dominantly inherited type II procollagen gene deletion in a non-lethal form of skeletal dysplasia, namely spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia, the data more generally demonstrate that different type II procollagen gene mutations eventuate in a wide and diverse spectrum of clinical phenotypes.
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