4.5 Review

Collagen Structure-Function Mapping Informs Applications for Regenerative Medicine

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering8010003

Keywords

type I collagen; type III collagen; interactome; microfibril; ligand binding; extracellular matrix; connective tissue; fibrosis; angiogenesis; hemostasis; therapeutic antibodies

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Type I collagen is a key protein in vertebrates, playing essential roles in tissue form and function. Understanding the structure-function relationship of collagen and its disease-associated mutations can lead to insights for anti-fibrotic treatments, tissue regeneration, and biomimetic collagen design.
Type I collagen, the predominant protein of vertebrates, assembles into fibrils that orchestrate the form and function of bone, tendon, skin, and other tissues. Collagen plays roles in hemostasis, wound healing, angiogenesis, and biomineralization, and its dysfunction contributes to fibrosis, atherosclerosis, cancer metastasis, and brittle bone disease. To elucidate the type I collagen structure-function relationship, we constructed a type I collagen fibril interactome, including its functional sites and disease-associated mutations. When projected onto an X-ray diffraction model of the native collagen microfibril, data revealed a matrix interaction domain that assumes structural roles including collagen assembly, crosslinking, proteoglycan (PG) binding, and mineralization, and the cell interaction domain supporting dynamic aspects of collagen biology such as hemostasis, tissue remodeling, and cell adhesion. Our type III collagen interactome corroborates this model. We propose that in quiescent tissues, the fibril projects a structural face; however, tissue injury releases blood into the collagenous stroma, triggering exposure of the fibrils' cell and ligand binding sites crucial for tissue remodeling and regeneration. Applications of our research include discovery of anti-fibrotic antibodies and elucidating their interactions with collagen, and using insights from our angiogenesis studies and collagen structure-function model to inform the design of super-angiogenic collagens and collagen mimetics.

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