Marfan syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder of connective tissue caused by mutations in fibrillin-1 (encoded by FBN1 in humans and Fbn1 in mice), a matrix component of extracellular microfibrils. A distinct subgroup of individuals with Marfan syndrome have distal airspace enlargement, historically described as emphysema, which frequently results in spontaneous lung rupture (pneumothorax; refs. 1-3). To investigate the pathogenesis of genetically imposed emphysema, we analyzed the lung phenotype of mice deficient in fibrillin-1, an accepted model of Marfan syndrome. Lung abnormalities are evident in the immediate postnatal period and manifest as a developmental impairment of distal alveolar septation. Aged mice deficient in fibrillin-1 develop destructive emphysema consistent with the view that early developmental perturbations can predispose to late-onset, seemingly acquired phenotypes. We show that mice deficient in fibrillin-1 have marked dysregulation of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) activation and signaling, resulting in apoptosis in the developing lung. Perinatal antagonism of TGF-beta attenuates apoptosis and rescues alveolar septation in vivo. These data indicate that matrix sequestration of cytokines is crucial to their regulated activation and signaling and that perturbation of this function can contribute to the pathogenesis of disease.
Marfan syndrome is an inherited disorder of connective tissue manifested in the ocular, skeletal and cardiovascular systems. It is inherited as an autosomal dominant with high penetrance, but has great clinical variability. Linkage studies have mapped the Marfan locus to chromosome 15q15-21.3. There have been no reports of genetic heterogeneity in the syndrome. Following the identification of fibrillin (a glycoprotein component of the extracellular microfibril), immunohistopathological quantification of the protein in skin and fibroblast culture, and examination of fibrillin synthesis, extracellular transport, and incorporation into the extracellular matrix (D. M. Milewicz, R.E.P., E. S. Crawford and P. H. Byers, manuscript in preparation) have demonstrated abnormalities of fibrillin metabolism in most patients. A portion of the complementary DNA encoding fibrillin has been cloned and mapped by in situ hybridization to chromosome 15. Here we report that the fibrillin gene is linked to the Marfan phenotype (theta = 0.00; logarithm of the odds (lod) = 3.9) and describe a de novo missense mutation in the fibrillin gene in two patients with sporadic disease. We thus implicate fibrillin as the protein defective in patients with the Marfan syndrome.
Abstract.A new connective tissue protein, which we call fibrillin, has been isolated from the medium of human fibroblast cell cultures. Electrophoresis of the disulfide bond-reduced protein gave a single band with an estimated molecular mass of 350,000 D. This 350-kD protein appeared to possess intrachain disulfide bonds. It could be stained with periodic acid-Schiff reagent, and after metabolic labeling, it contained [3H]glucosamine. It could not be labeled with [35S]sulfate. It was resistant to digestion by bacterial collagenase. Using mAbs specific for fibrillin, we demonstrated its widespread distribution in the connective tissue matrices of skin, lung, kidney, vasculature, cartilage, tendon, muscle, cornea, and ciliary zonule. Electron microscopic immunolocalization with colloidal gold conjugates specified its location to a class of extracellular structural elements described as microfibrils. These microfibrils possessed a characteristic appearance and averaged 10 nm in diameter. Microfibrils around the amorphous cores of the elastic fiber system as well as bundles of microfibrils without elastin cores were labeled equally well with antibody. Immunolocalization suggested that fibrillin is arrayed periodically along the individual microfibril and that individual microfibrils may be aligned within bundles. The periodicity of the epitope appeared to match the interstitial collagen band periodicity. In contrast, type VI collagen, which has been proposed as a possible microfibrillar component, was immunolocalized with a specific mAb to small diameter microfilaments that interweave among the large, banded collagen fibers; it was not associated with the system of microfibrils identified by the presence of fibrillin.
Latent transforming growth factor -binding protein 1 (LTBP-1) targets latent complexes of transforming growth factor  to the extracellular matrix, where the latent cytokine is subsequently activated by several different mechanisms. Fibrillins are extracellular matrix macromolecules whose primary function is architectural: fibrillins assemble into ultrastructurally distinct microfibrils that are ubiquitous in the connective tissue space. LTBPs and fibrillins are highly homologous molecules, and colocalization in the matrix of cultured cells has been reported. To address whether LTBP-1 functions architecturally like fibrillins, microfibrils were extracted from tissues and analyzed immunochemically. In addition, binding studies were conducted to determine whether LTBP-1 interacts with fibrillins. LTBP-1 was not detected in extracted beaded-string microfibrils, suggesting that LTBP-1 is not an integral structural component of microfibrils. However, binding studies demonstrated interactions between LTBP-1 and fibrillins. The binding site was within three domains of the LTBP-1 C terminus, and in fibrillin-1 the site was defined within four domains near the N terminus. Immunolocalization data were consistent with the hypothesis that LTBP-1 is a fibrillin-associated protein present in certain tissues but not in others. In tissues where LTBP-1 is not expressed, LTBP-4 may substitute for LTBP-1, because the C-terminal end of LTBP-4 binds equally well to fibrillin. A model depicting the relationship between LTBP-1 and fibrillin microfibrils is proposed.The fibrillins and latent transforming growth factor -binding proteins (LTBPs) 1 are members of a family of homologous molecules. The fibrillins and LTBPs contain multiple calciumbinding epidermal growth factor-like modules interspersed by a domain module (the 8-Cys or TB module), so far found only in these two proteins. Fibrillin-1 (1-4) and fibrillin-2 (5, 6) share a highly similar overall structure. Both molecules are of equivalent size (ϳ350 kDa) and domain organization. In contrast, LTBP-1 (7, 8), LTBP-2 (9), LTBP-3 (10), and LTBP-4 (11, 12) are each smaller than the fibrillins and variable in size.Extensive immunolocalization data combined with structural analyses of the fibrillin-1 monomer and fibrillin-containing microfibrils (1, 13-15) have established that fibrillin-1 is a major structural component of connective tissue microfibrils. In addition, genetic evidence in humans (16, 17) and mice (18,19) has confirmed that fibrillin-1 performs a significant role in the maintenance of microfibrils and elastic fibers.Fibrillin-2, whose structure is predicted to be highly similar to fibrillin-1, has also been immunolocalized to microfibrils (20). However, in contrast to fibrillin-1, the contribution of fibrillin-2 to microfibril structure is temporally and spatially restricted. In situ hybridization studies in mice indicated that expression of the fbn2 gene is most prominent in the early developing fetus (20). Genetic evidence in humans (5, 21) suggests that fibrillin-...
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