What gives our bodily structures tensile strength?
collagen
What gives our bodily structures contractibility?
elastin
What is the most abundant protein in the body?
Collagen (25-30%)
What are the three types of collagen?
1) fibrin-forming
2) network-forming
3) fibril-associating
What genes make up fibrin forming collagen?
col1A1 and col1A2
What is the structure of collagen and what makes this structure possible?
- the amino acid sequence glyXY (Glycine followed by two other amino acids)
Why is Glycine used in collagen and what are the two amino acids that usually follow it?
How many different collagen genes are there in the genome?
42
How is Collagen assembled?
What occurs at the C and N end of nascent collagen that doesn’t occur anywhere else in the collagen?
Disulfide bonds that help with folding
In what way are collagen molecules arranged?
Staggered for strength
What cells make collagen for cartilage?
condricytes
What cells make collagen for bone?
osteoblasts
What cells make collagen for everything but bone and cartilage?
fibroblasts
What enzyme are responsible for the hydroxylation of proline and lysine? And what do these enzymes require?
- they require Fe2+ and vitamin C (ascorbic acid)
what enzyme is responsible for the crosslinks in collagen fibers and what is its cofactor?
- copper
what is the purpose of crosslinking and how is it accomplished?
what happens in menkes disease?
it is a copper deficiency that results in lysyloxidase malfunctioning
what happens in scurvy disease and why?
who was the doctor who held the first clinical trial?
Dr. James Lind in 1747
what is osteogenesis imperfecta (OI)
what is the order of severity among the forms of Osteogenesis imperfecta?
type 2 is the worst
type 3 and 4 are pretty bad
type 1 is mild as hell.
what is the usual cause of type 2, 3, and 4 OI?
substitutions that change glycine to a larger amino acid in col1A1 and col1A2
what is the usual reason for type I OI?
a premature stop codon that inhibits translation of a full protein