The BMD results confirm our previous work (but at peripheral bone mass sites), and our findings associating bone resorption with dietary factors provide further evidence of a positive link between fruit and vegetable consumption and bone health.
Bruck syndrome is characterized by the presence of osteoporosis, joint contractures, fragile bones, and short stature. We report that lysine residues within the telopeptides of collagen type I in bone are underhydroxylated, leading to aberrant crosslinking, but that the lysine residues in the triple helix are normally modified. In contrast to bone, cartilage and ligament show unaltered telopeptide hydroxylation as evidenced by normal patterns of crosslinking. The results provide compelling evidence that collagen crosslinking is regulated primarily by tissue-specific enzymes that hydroxylate only telopeptide lysine residues and not those destined for the helical portion of the molecule. This new family of enzymes appears to provide the primary regulation for controlling the different pathways of collagen crosslinking and explains why crosslink patterns are tissue specific and not related to a genetic collagen type. A genome screen identified only a single region on chromosome 17p12 where all affected sibs shared a cluster of haplotypes identical by descent; this might be the BS (Bruck syndrome) locus and consequently the region where bone telopeptidyl lysyl hydroxylase is located. Further knowledge of this enzyme has important implications for conditions where aberrant expression of telopeptide lysyl hydroxylase occurs, such as fibrosis and scar formation.Collagen fibrils are important for the mechanical strength of bone (1-2). The tensile properties of fibrils result from intermolecular crosslinks connecting the nonhelical ends of a collagen molecule (telopeptides) with the triple helical part of an adjacent molecule (2-3). More than ten different collagen crosslinks are known; their structure, number, and location are highly tissue specific and not related to a specific collagen type (4-8). Stereochemical and x-ray diffraction studies revealed that differences in molecular packing of collagen within fibrils are associated with differences in crosslink profiles (9-12). Proper mineralization probably depends on a correct alignment of collagen molecules, as nucleation of calcium apatite crystals starts in the gap region, i.e., in the area adjacent to the crosslink site (9). Alterations in crosslink patterns associated with changes in the molecular packing are, therefore, expected to result in aberrant mineralization.Residues involved in crosslinking are mainly the amino acids lysine (Lys) or hydroxylysine (Hyl) (4-8). The enzyme lysyl hydroxylase (LH) (procollagen-lysine, 2-oxoglutarate 5-dioxygenase; EC 1.14.11.4) catalyzes the conversion of Lys into Hyl (13-15). Crosslinking is initiated only after specific Lys or Hyl residues of the telopeptides are converted extracellularly by the enzyme lysyl oxidase into the aldehydes allysine and hydroxyallysine, respectively (4-8). The aldehydes subsequently react with Lys, Hyl, or histidyl, residues of the triple helix to give characteristic di-, tri-, and tetrafunctional crosslinks. Two related routes for the formation of crosslinks have been described, based on ...
Lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3, encoded by PLOD3) is a multifunctional enzyme capable of catalyzing hydroxylation of lysyl residues and O-glycosylation of hydroxylysyl residues producing either monosaccharide (Gal) or disaccharide (Glc-Gal) derivatives, reactions that form part of the many posttranslational modifications required during collagen biosynthesis. Animal studies have confirmed the importance of LH3, particularly in biosynthesis of the highly glycosylated type IV and VI collagens, but to date, the functional significance in vivo of this enzyme in man is predominantly unknown. We report here a human disorder of LH3 presenting as a compound heterozygote with recessive inheritance. One mutation dramatically reduced the sugar-transfer activity of LH3, whereas another abrogated lysyl hydroxylase activity; these changes were accompanied by reduced LH3 protein levels in cells. The disorder has a unique phenotype causing severe morbidity as a result of features that overlap with a number of known collagen disorders.
Lysyl hydroxylase 3 (LH3) is a multifunctional enzyme possessing lysyl hydroxylase (LH), hydroxylysyl galactosyltransferase (GT) and galactosylhydroxylysyl glucosyltransferase (GGT) activities in vitro. To investigate the in vivo importance of LH3-catalyzed lysine hydroxylation and hydroxylysine-linked glycosylations, three different LH3-manipulated mouse lines were generated. Mice with a mutation that blocked only the LH activity of LH3 developed normally, but showed defects in the structure of the basement membrane and in collagen fibril organization in newborn skin and lung. Analysis of a hypomorphic LH3 mouse line with the same mutation, however, demonstrated that the reduction of the GGT activity of LH3 disrupts the localization of type IV collagen, and thus the formation of basement membranes during mouse embryogenesis leading to lethality at embryonic day (E) 9.5-14.5. Strikingly, survival of hypomorphic embryos and the formation of the basement membrane were directly correlated with the level of GGT activity. In addition, an LH3-knockout mouse lacked GGT activity leading to lethality at E9.5. The results confirm that LH3 has LH and GGT activities in vivo, LH3 is the main molecule responsible for GGT activity and that the GGT activity, not the LH activity of LH3, is essential for the formation of the basement membrane. Together our results demonstrate for the first time the importance of hydroxylysine-linked glycosylation for collagens.
The change in the amounts of the three major reducible cross-links was followed throughout the bovine-life span. The major reducible cross-link in embryonic skin is 6,7-dehydro-N(epsilon) -(2-hydroxy-5-amino-5-carboxypentyl)hydroxylysine, but this is gradually replaced in the latter stages of gestation or early postnatal growth period by two other Schiff bases, 6,7-dehydro-N(epsilon)-(5-amino-5-carboxypentyl)hydroxylysine and a component not yet identified, designated Fraction C. These latter two Schiff bases increase in amount during the rapid growth period to a maximum, after which they then slowly decrease until at maturity they are virtually absent. The proportion of these Schiff bases closely reflects the rate of growth, i.e. the amount of newly synthesized collagen present at any one time. Similarly, the three Schiff bases present in tendon and the one in cartilage slowly decrease during maturation. No evidence for the possible stabilization of these aldimine bonds during maturation by reduction in vivo was found by three different analytical techniques. Concurrently with the decrease in the proportion of the Schiff bases some new reducible components increased during maturation, but their characterization as N(epsilon)-glycosylamines demonstrated that they were not related to the lysine-derived aldehyde components. The significance of these components in the aging process cannot at present be assessed. As no evidence was obtained for any new reducible cross-links replacing the Schiff bases, it is probable that the latter are intermediate cross-links and that during maturation they are stabilized to some as yet unknown non-reducible cross-link as previously proposed (Bailey, 1968).
In the present study a rat animal model of lathyrism was employed to decipher whether anatomically confined alterations in collagen cross-links are sufficient to influence the mechanical properties of whole bone.Animal experiments were performed under an ethics committee approved protocol. Sixty-four female (47 day old) rats of equivalent weights were divided into four groups (16 per group): Controls were fed a semi-synthetic diet containing 0.6% calcium and 0.6% phosphorus for 2 or 4 weeks and β-APN treated animals were fed additionally with β-aminopropionitrile (0.1% dry weight). At the end of this period the rats in the four groups were sacrificed, and L2–L6 vertebra were collected. Collagen cross-links were determined by both biochemical and spectroscopic (Fourier transform infrared imaging (FTIRI)) analyses. Mineral content and distribution (BMDD) were determined by quantitative backscattered electron imaging (qBEI), and mineral maturity/crystallinity by FTIRI techniques. Micro-CT was used to describe the architectural properties. Mechanical performance of whole bone as well as of bone matrix material was tested by vertebral compression tests and by nano-indentation, respectively.The data of the present study indicate that β-APN treatment changed whole vertebra properties compared to non-treated rats, including collagen cross-links pattern, trabecular bone volume to tissue ratio and trabecular thickness, which were all decreased (p < 0.05). Further, compression tests revealed a significant negative impact of β-APN treatment on maximal force to failure and energy to failure, while stiffness was not influenced. Bone mineral density distribution (BMDD) was not altered either. At the material level, β-APN treated rats exhibited increased Pyd/Divalent cross-link ratios in areas confined to a newly formed bone. Moreover, nano-indentation experiments showed that the E-modulus and hardness were reduced only in newly formed bone areas under the influence of β-APN, despite a similar mineral content.In conclusion the results emphasize the pivotal role of collagen cross-links in the determination of bone quality and mechanical integrity. However, in this rat animal model of lathyrism, the coupled alterations of tissue structural properties make it difficult to weigh the contribution of the anatomically confined material changes to the overall mechanical performance of whole bone. Interestingly, the collagen cross-link ratio in bone forming areas had the same profile as seen in actively bone forming trabecular surfaces in human iliac crest biopsies of osteoporotic patients.
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