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Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction

Vertebrate body designs rely on hydroxyapatite as the principal mineral component of relatively light-weight, articulated endoskeletons and sophisticated tooth-bearing jaws, facilitating rapid movement and efficient predation. Biological mineralization and skeletal growth are frequently accomplished...

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Autores principales: Jin, Tianquan, Ito, Yoshihiro, Luan, Xianghong, Dangaria, Smit, Walker, Cameron, Allen, Michael, Kulkarni, Ashok, Gibson, Carolyn, Braatz, Richard, Liao, Xiubei, Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2787623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20027208
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000262
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author Jin, Tianquan
Ito, Yoshihiro
Luan, Xianghong
Dangaria, Smit
Walker, Cameron
Allen, Michael
Kulkarni, Ashok
Gibson, Carolyn
Braatz, Richard
Liao, Xiubei
Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
author_facet Jin, Tianquan
Ito, Yoshihiro
Luan, Xianghong
Dangaria, Smit
Walker, Cameron
Allen, Michael
Kulkarni, Ashok
Gibson, Carolyn
Braatz, Richard
Liao, Xiubei
Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
author_sort Jin, Tianquan
collection PubMed
description Vertebrate body designs rely on hydroxyapatite as the principal mineral component of relatively light-weight, articulated endoskeletons and sophisticated tooth-bearing jaws, facilitating rapid movement and efficient predation. Biological mineralization and skeletal growth are frequently accomplished through proteins containing polyproline repeat elements. Through their well-defined yet mobile and flexible structure polyproline-rich proteins control mineral shape and contribute many other biological functions including Alzheimer's amyloid aggregation and prolamine plant storage. In the present study we have hypothesized that polyproline repeat proteins exert their control over biological events such as mineral growth, plaque aggregation, or viscous adhesion by altering the length of their central repeat domain, resulting in dramatic changes in supramolecular assembly dimensions. In order to test our hypothesis, we have used the vertebrate mineralization protein amelogenin as an exemplar and determined the biological effect of the four-fold increased polyproline tandem repeat length in the amphibian/mammalian transition. To study the effect of polyproline repeat length on matrix assembly, protein structure, and apatite crystal growth, we have measured supramolecular assembly dimensions in various vertebrates using atomic force microscopy, tested the effect of protein assemblies on crystal growth by electron microscopy, generated a transgenic mouse model to examine the effect of an abbreviated polyproline sequence on crystal growth, and determined the structure of polyproline repeat elements using 3D NMR. Our study shows that an increase in PXX/PXQ tandem repeat motif length results (i) in a compaction of protein matrix subunit dimensions, (ii) reduced conformational variability, (iii) an increase in polyproline II helices, and (iv) promotion of apatite crystal length. Together, these findings establish a direct relationship between polyproline tandem repeat fragment assemblies and the evolution and the design of vertebrate mineralized tissue microstructures. Our findings reveal that in the greater context of chordate evolution, the biological control of apatite growth by polyproline-based matrix assemblies provides a molecular basis for the evolution of the vertebrate body plan.
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spelling pubmed-27876232009-12-22 Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction Jin, Tianquan Ito, Yoshihiro Luan, Xianghong Dangaria, Smit Walker, Cameron Allen, Michael Kulkarni, Ashok Gibson, Carolyn Braatz, Richard Liao, Xiubei Diekwisch, Thomas G. H. PLoS Biol Research Article Vertebrate body designs rely on hydroxyapatite as the principal mineral component of relatively light-weight, articulated endoskeletons and sophisticated tooth-bearing jaws, facilitating rapid movement and efficient predation. Biological mineralization and skeletal growth are frequently accomplished through proteins containing polyproline repeat elements. Through their well-defined yet mobile and flexible structure polyproline-rich proteins control mineral shape and contribute many other biological functions including Alzheimer's amyloid aggregation and prolamine plant storage. In the present study we have hypothesized that polyproline repeat proteins exert their control over biological events such as mineral growth, plaque aggregation, or viscous adhesion by altering the length of their central repeat domain, resulting in dramatic changes in supramolecular assembly dimensions. In order to test our hypothesis, we have used the vertebrate mineralization protein amelogenin as an exemplar and determined the biological effect of the four-fold increased polyproline tandem repeat length in the amphibian/mammalian transition. To study the effect of polyproline repeat length on matrix assembly, protein structure, and apatite crystal growth, we have measured supramolecular assembly dimensions in various vertebrates using atomic force microscopy, tested the effect of protein assemblies on crystal growth by electron microscopy, generated a transgenic mouse model to examine the effect of an abbreviated polyproline sequence on crystal growth, and determined the structure of polyproline repeat elements using 3D NMR. Our study shows that an increase in PXX/PXQ tandem repeat motif length results (i) in a compaction of protein matrix subunit dimensions, (ii) reduced conformational variability, (iii) an increase in polyproline II helices, and (iv) promotion of apatite crystal length. Together, these findings establish a direct relationship between polyproline tandem repeat fragment assemblies and the evolution and the design of vertebrate mineralized tissue microstructures. Our findings reveal that in the greater context of chordate evolution, the biological control of apatite growth by polyproline-based matrix assemblies provides a molecular basis for the evolution of the vertebrate body plan. Public Library of Science 2009-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2787623/ /pubmed/20027208 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000262 Text en Jin et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jin, Tianquan
Ito, Yoshihiro
Luan, Xianghong
Dangaria, Smit
Walker, Cameron
Allen, Michael
Kulkarni, Ashok
Gibson, Carolyn
Braatz, Richard
Liao, Xiubei
Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction
title Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction
title_full Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction
title_fullStr Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction
title_full_unstemmed Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction
title_short Elongated Polyproline Motifs Facilitate Enamel Evolution through Matrix Subunit Compaction
title_sort elongated polyproline motifs facilitate enamel evolution through matrix subunit compaction
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2787623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20027208
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000262
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