Chen Q, Zhang Y, Johnson D M, Goetinck P F
Musculoskeletal Research Laboratory, Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033, USA.
Mol Biol Cell. 1999 Jul;10(7):2149-62. doi: 10.1091/mbc.10.7.2149.
Cartilage matrix protein (CMP) is the prototype of the newly discovered matrilin family, all of which contain von Willebrand factor A domains. Although the function of matrilins remain unclear, we have shown that, in primary chondrocyte cultures, CMP (matrilin-1) forms a filamentous network, which is made up of two types of filaments, a collagen-dependent one and a collagen-independent one. In this study, we demonstrate that the collagen-independent CMP filaments are enriched in pericellular compartments, extending directly from chondrocyte membranes. Their morphology can be distinguished from that of collagen filaments by immunogold electron microscopy, and mimicked by that of self-assembled purified CMP. The assembly of CMP filaments can occur from transfection of a wild-type CMP transgene alone in skin fibroblasts, which do not produce endogenous CMP. Conversely, assembly of endogenous CMP filaments by chondrocytes can be inhibited specifically by dominant negative CMP transgenes. The two A domains within CMP serve essential but different functions during network formation. Deletion of the A2 domain converts the trimeric CMP into a mixture of monomers, dimers, and trimers, whereas deletion of the A1 domain does not affect the trimeric configuration. This suggests that the A2 domain modulates multimerization of CMP. Absence of either A domain from CMP abolishes its ability to form collagen-independent filaments. In particular, Asp22 in A1 and Asp255 in A2 are essential; double point mutation of these residues disrupts CMP network formation. These residues are part of the metal ion-dependent adhesion sites, thus a metal ion-dependent adhesion site-mediated adhesion mechanism may be applicable to matrilin assembly. Taken together, our data suggest that CMP is a bridging molecule that connects matrix components in cartilage to form an integrated matrix network.
软骨基质蛋白(CMP)是新发现的matrilin家族的原型,该家族所有成员均含有血管性血友病因子A结构域。尽管matrilin的功能尚不清楚,但我们已经表明,在原代软骨细胞培养物中,CMP(matrilin-1)形成丝状网络,该网络由两种类型的细丝组成,一种是胶原依赖性细丝,另一种是胶原非依赖性细丝。在本研究中,我们证明胶原非依赖性CMP细丝在细胞周围隔室中富集,直接从软骨细胞膜延伸。通过免疫金电子显微镜可以将它们的形态与胶原细丝的形态区分开来,并且可以通过自组装纯化的CMP的形态来模拟。仅通过野生型CMP转基因转染皮肤成纤维细胞(不产生内源性CMP)就可以发生CMP细丝的组装。相反,软骨细胞对内源性CMP细丝的组装可以被显性负性CMP转基因特异性抑制。CMP中的两个A结构域在网络形成过程中发挥着重要但不同的功能。删除A2结构域会将三聚体CMP转化为单体、二聚体和三聚体的混合物,而删除A1结构域不会影响三聚体构型。这表明A2结构域调节CMP的多聚化。CMP中任何一个A结构域的缺失都会消除其形成胶原非依赖性细丝的能力。特别是,A1中的Asp22和A2中的Asp255是必不可少的;这些残基的双点突变会破坏CMP网络的形成。这些残基是金属离子依赖性粘附位点的一部分,因此金属离子依赖性粘附位点介导的粘附机制可能适用于matrilin的组装。综上所述,我们的数据表明CMP是一种桥接分子,它连接软骨中的基质成分以形成一个整合的基质网络。