| Literature DB >> 26395334 |
Izabela Krupska1,2, Elspeth A Bruford3, Brahim Chaqour4,5,6.
Abstract
"CCN" is an acronym referring to the first letter of each of the first three members of this original group of mammalian functionally and phylogenetically distinct extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins [i.e., cysteine-rich 61 (CYR61), connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), and nephroblastoma-overexpressed (NOV)]. Although "CCN" genes are unlikely to have arisen from a common ancestral gene, their encoded proteins share multimodular structures in which most cysteine residues are strictly conserved in their positions within several structural motifs. The CCN genes can be subdivided into members developmentally indispensable for embryonic viability (e.g., CCN1, 2 and 5), each assuming unique tissue-specific functions, and members not essential for embryonic development (e.g., CCN3, 4 and 6), probably due to a balance of functional redundancy and specialization during evolution. The temporo-spatial regulation of the CCN genes and the structural information contained within the sequences of their encoded proteins reflect diversity in their context and tissue-specific functions. Genetic association studies and experimental anomalies, replicated in various animal models, have shown that altered CCN gene structure or expression is associated with "injury" stimuli--whether mechanical (e.g., trauma, shear stress) or chemical (e.g., ischemia, hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, inflammation). Consequently, increased organ-specific susceptibility to structural damages ensues. These data underscore the critical functions of CCN proteins in the dynamics of tissue repair and regeneration and in the compensatory responses preceding organ failure. A better understanding of the regulation and mode of action of each CCN member will be useful in developing specific gain- or loss-of-function strategies for therapeutic purposes.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26395334 PMCID: PMC4579636 DOI: 10.1186/s40246-015-0046-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Nomenclature and chromosomal location of the genes encoding CCN proteins in the human and mouse genome
| Unified nomenclature | Approved gene symbol | Approved gene name | Human | Mouse | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chromosome | Chromosome location | Chromosome | Chromosome location | |||
| CCN1 | CYR61 | Cysteine-rich, angiogenic inducer, 61 | 1 | 1p22.3 | 3 | 70.18 cM |
| CCN2 | CTGF | Connective tissue growth factor | 6 | 6q23.2 | 10 | 11.84 cM |
| CCN3 | NOV | Nephroblastoma overexpressed | 8 | 8q24.12 | 15 | 21.49 cM |
| CCN4 | WISP1 | WNT1 inducible signaling pathway protein1 | 8 | 8q24.22 | 15 | 29.3 cM |
| CCN5 | WISP2 | WNT1 inducible signaling pathway protein 2 | 20 | 20q13.12 | 2 | 84.49 cM |
| CCN6 | WISP3 | WNT1 inducible signaling pathway protein 3 | 6 | 6q21 | 10 | 20.19 cM |
Murine loci are expressed in centimorgans (CM)
Fig. 1CCN gene and protein organization. Schematic diagrams of the overall gene (a) and protein domain organization (b) showing the secretory signal and the homologous domains (IGFBP insulin-like growth factor binding protein, VWC von Willebrand factor type C repeat, TSP-1 thrombospondin type 1 repeat, CT carboxy-terminal domain). The specific modular organization of each member of this group of genes is shown in c. Not to scale
Fig. 2Dendrogram showing the phylogenetic relations between the genes encoding the CCN proteins. The total number of differences between sequences (i.e., probability of relatedness) is shown to the right. The human genes are framed in the diagram. m mus musculus-mouse, r rattus norvegicus-rat, g gallus gallus-chicken, b bos taurus-cow, s sus scrofa-pig, c canis lupus familiaris-dog, d danio rerio-zebrafish
Fig. 3Sequence alignments of the CCN proteins. Human sequence alignment was performed using the ClustalW2 multiple sequence alignment program. The sections of the sequences corresponding to each domain are highlighted using a different color. CCN proteins share 38 conserved cysteine residues (in red). The exceptions are CCN5 and CCN6, which contain 28 and 34 cysteine residues, respectively