Literature DB >> 5500318

Studies in vivo on the biosynthesis of collagen and elastin in ascorbic acid-deficient guinea pigs. Evidence for the formation and degradation of a partially hydroxylated collagen.

M J Barnes, B J Constable, L F Morton, E Kodicek.   

Abstract

1. After the administration of l-[G-(3)H]proline to guinea pigs deprived of ascorbic acid for increasing periods of time, the specific radioactivities of proline and hydroxyproline in skin collagen and aortic elastin were determined at various time-intervals after administration of the labelled compound with a view to studying the formation and degradation of collagen and elastin both deficient in hydroxyproline. 2. As judged from the incorporation of radioactivity into elastin proline, elastin synthesis was not decreased in the ascorbic acid-deficient animals. There was however, a rapid decline in the specific radioactivity of elastin hydroxyproline. The proline/hydroxyproline specific-radioactivity ratio was approx. 1.5:1 after 6 days and 20:1 after 12 days of ascorbic acid deprivation, in contrast with the ratio of 1:1 in controls. The results suggested that the effect of ascorbic acid deficiency on elastin biosynthesis could be regarded as simply an elimination of hydroxylation of elastin proline with the formation and retention of a polymer increasingly deficient in hydroxyproline. 3. Collagen proline and hydroxyproline specific radioactivities were derived from material that was soluble in hot trichloroacetic acid, non-diffusible and collagenase-degradable. In contrast with elastin, there was a rapid decline in the specific radioactivity of proline as well as hydroxyproline in collagen from the ascorbic acid-deficient animals. However, the proline/hydroxyproline specific-radioactivity ratio in all samples from scorbutic animals was consistently slightly above 1:1. The results suggest the appearance in place of collagen, but in rapidly diminishing amounts, of a partially hydroxylated collagen in which the degree of hydroxylation may be decreased only by approx. 10%. 4. Incorporation of radioactivity into the diffusible hydroxyproline in skin remained relatively high despite the rapid decline in the incorporation of radioactivity into collagen. This observation is interpreted as indicative of an increasing degree of degradation of partially hydroxylated collagen to diffusible peptides. An alternative explanation might be that partially hydroxylated peptides are released to an increasing extent from ribosomes before they attain a length at least sufficient to render them non-diffusible. In either case it implies the accumulation in scurvy of low-molecular-weight peptides enriched in proline and deficient in hydroxyproline and could explain the failure to accumulate a high-molecular-weight collagen deficient in hydroxyproline. 5. It is thought, however, that, in addition, an inhibition of ribosomal amino acid incorporation leading to decreased synthesis of partially hydroxylated collagen may also occur, perhaps secondarily to impaired hydroxylation.

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Year:  1970        PMID: 5500318      PMCID: PMC1179389          DOI: 10.1042/bj1190575

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochem J        ISSN: 0264-6021            Impact factor:   3.857


  30 in total

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5.  Effect of copper deficiency on chick bone collagen and selected bone enzymes.

Authors:  R B Rucker; H E Parker; J C Rogler
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6.  The hydroxyproline of elastin.

Authors:  J P Bentley; A N Hanson
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  1969-03

7.  Excretion of hydroxyproline and other amino acids in scorbutic guinea-pigs.

Authors:  M J Barnes; B J Constable; E Kodicek
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  1969-07-30

8.  Substrate specificity of collagen proline hydroxylase: hydroxylation of a specific proline residue in bradykinin.

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Authors:  G W Cooper; D J Prockop
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  17 in total

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Authors:  M J Barnes; B J Constable; L F Morton; P M Royce
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Review 5.  Extracellular matrix in lung development, homeostasis and disease.

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6.  Presence of type III collagen in guinea-pig dermal scar.

Authors:  M J Barnes; L F Morton; R C Bennett; A J Bailey; T J Sims
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7.  Influence of ascorbic acid on ribosomal patterns and collagen biosynthesis in healing wounds of scorbutic guinea pigs.

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8.  Ascorbic acid status as affected by dietary treatment in the Siberian sturgeon (Acipenser baeri Brandt): tissue concentration, mobilisation and L-gulonolactone oxidase activity.

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9.  The effect of ascorbic acid on the nature and production of collagen and elastin by rat smooth-muscle cells.

Authors:  Y A de Clerck; P A Jones
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1980-01-15       Impact factor: 3.857

10.  Effect of ascorbic acid on protein synthesis and collagen hydroxylation in continuous flow organ cultures of adult mouse periodontal tissues.

Authors:  J Sodek; J Feng; E H Yen; A H Melcher
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