| Literature DB >> 31261996 |
Evan Davison-Kotler1,2, William S Marshall1, Elena García-Gareta3.
Abstract
Collagen is the most frequently used protein in the fields of biomaterials and regenerative medicine. Within the skin, collagen type I and III are the most abundant, while collagen type VII is associated with pathologies of the dermal-epidermal junction. The focus of this review is mainly collagens I and III, with a brief overview of collagen VII. Currently, the majority of collagen is extracted from animal sources; however, animal-derived collagen has a number of shortcomings, including immunogenicity, batch-to-batch variation, and pathogenic contamination. Recombinant collagen is a potential solution to the aforementioned issues, although production of correctly post-translationally modified recombinant human collagen has not yet been performed at industrial scale. This review provides an overview of current collagen sources, associated shortcomings, and potential resolutions. Recombinant expression systems are discussed, as well as the issues associated with each method of expression.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; collagen; collagen sources; recombinant collagen; regenerative medicine; skin; tissue engineering; wound healing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31261996 PMCID: PMC6783949 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering6030056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Summary of marine-derived collagen isolates, with notes indicating variation from mammalian-derived collagen and potential applications.
| Source | Expressed Collagen | Notes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marine Invertebrates | Jelly blubber ( | Type I | Low denaturation temperature; reduced viscosity and proline content compared to RASC | [ |
| Flame jellyfish ( | Type I | Collagen sponge used as hemostat; effective due to physical properties, no noted superiority to traditional protein-based hemostatic agents | [ | |
| Atlantic sea nettle ( | Type I | High thermal denaturation temperature (37 °C); large variance in amino acid content compared to RASC; significant amount of hydroxyproline | [ | |
| Barrel jellyfish ( | Type I | Heparin inhibited cellular adhesion to jellyfish-derived collagen by 55%; fibrillar morphology similar to mammalian collagen | [ | |
| Squid ( | Type I | High thermal denaturation temperature (35 °C), indicating potential for commercial use | [ | |
| Bigfin reef squid ( | Type I | Variance in amino acid composition compared to RASC; high solubility at narrow acidic pH range 4–5 | [ | |
| Crown-of-thorns starfish ( | Type I | Denaturation temperature of 33 °C, comparable to mammalian collagen; proline content similar to mammalian collagen | [ | |
| Teleost Fish | Atlantic salmon ( | Type I | Fish skin collagen less resistant to high temperatures, with lower denaturation and thermal decomposition temperatures being observed in fish skin collagen compared to bovine-derived collagen | [ |
| Pacific cod ( | Type I | Proline and hydroxyproline content lower than bovine- and porcine-derived collagen; extremely low thermal denaturation temperature (14.5 °C), likely not useful for biomaterials without significant crosslinking | [ | |
| Olive flounder ( | Type I | Significant collagen extraction yield from skin | [ | |
| Catfish ( | Type I | Type I collagen extracted from the swim bladder and used to form chitosan scaffold; crosslinking with glutaraldehyde yielded a scaffold with high tensile strength, low antigenicity, and high thermal stability | [ | |
| Nile tilapia ( | Type I | Tilapia-derived collagen sponges rarely elicited an inflammatory response in vivo, statistically similar to those elicited by bovine-derived collagen | [ | |
| Chum salmon ( | Type I | Very low denaturation temperature (18.6 °C), indicating a necessity to crosslink if used in biomaterials | [ | |
| Elasmobranch Fish | Blacktip shark ( | Type I | Denaturation temperature (34 °C) similar to that of mammalian-derived collagen | [ |
Summary of recombinant expression systems, with notes indicating variation from mammalian-derived collagen, methodological issues, and potential applications.
| Expression System | Transduced Gene | Expressed Collagen | Notes | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prokaryote |
| COL1A1 | Type I | Different amino acid expression when compared to natural collagen | [ |
|
| COL3A1; L230, L593 (APMV) | Type III | Expression collagen III and | [ | |
| Yeast |
| COL1A1, PH4A/B | Type I | - | [ |
|
| COL3A1, PH4A/B | Type III | Recombinant hydroxylated collagen III exhibited hemostatic properties in vivo | [ | |
|
| COL3A1, PH4A/B | Type III | Computational algorithm determined optimal oligonucleotide sequence | [ | |
| Addition of non-native cysteine residues created crosslinking and anchoring sites; increased melting point compared to other RHC | [ | ||||
| Plant |
| COL1A1/2, P4HA/B, LH3 | Type I | Expressed triple helix similar to native collagen; supported growth and proliferation of vascular endothelial cells | [ |
| COL1A1, P4HA/B | Type 1 | High yield collagen I produced by recombinant corn seed; hydroxylation of collagen led to enhanced thermostability. | [ | ||
| Human cell lines | HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells | COL1A1 | Type I | BP loss during initial propagation in | [ |
| HEK 293 kidney epithelial cells | COL5A1 | Type V | Addition of ascorbate to medium resulted in correctly folded, stable triple helix | [ | |
| HEK 293 kidney epithelial cells | COL7A1 | Type VII | Anchoring type VII collagen used to treat dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, by establishing dermal-epidermal adherence | [ | |
| Mammal | COL1A1 | Type I | Soluble (1)3 (I) procollagen with post-translational proline and lysine hydroxylation secreted in milk | [ | |
| Insect | COL3A1 | Type III | Hydroxylated triple helix molecules expressed intracellularly | [ | |
| COL3A1 | Type III | Hydroxylysine residue content slightly lower than non-recombinant expression | [ | ||
|
| COL1A1 | Gly-X-Y collage-like homodimer | Amino acid sequence and contents varied from natural collagen | [ |