Extracellular Matrix Flashcards

1
Q

Matrisome

A
  • collection of genes encoding ECM and associated proteins
  • Core Matrisome- encodes structural ECM components (collagens, Glycoproteins, Proteoglycans, Elastin and Matrikines)
  • Matrisome-Associaed Genes - encode proteins that interact w/ or remodel the ECM
    - Secreted factors- growth factors, cytokines,
    - ECM regulators - cross-linkers, modifying enzymes, proteases and protease inhibitors
    - ECM-affiliated proteins - mucins, lectins, glypicans, syndecans, etc
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2
Q

Collagen Structure

A
  • Repeats of glycine, proline, hydroxyproline
  • 3 alpha subunits then form helix
  • Hydroxyl groups of pralines and lysine form hydrogen bonds to stabilize helix
  • Then must helices packed together- due to glycine
  • Pralines provide twist in chain to form helical structure
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3
Q

Osteogenesis Imperfecta

A

“brittle bone disease”

auto dom; bone fragility, skeletal deformity, short stature, blue sclera, hearing loss, tooth fragility

  • Cannot form collagen I fibrils (mutation —> kink in helices—> degraded )
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4
Q

Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS)

A
  • skin hyper extensibility,joint hyper mobility, easy bruising, cigarette paper scarring
  • Mult types…classic, hyper mobility (joint dislocations and pain), vascular (susceptible to ruptures), kyphoscoliosis (hypotonia and joint laxity), arthrochalasia (dislocations, scoliosis, fractures), dermatosparaxis (extreme skin fragility, sagging, hernias)
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5
Q

Scurvy

A

no ascorbic acid which is required for proline hydroxylation to occur - if no hydroxylation than less stable hydrogen bonds w/in triple helix

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6
Q

Lathyrism

A
  • fragility (in bone or blood) caused by legumes, copper deficiency, BAPN in foods which inhibits lysol oxidases
  • AKA inhibits cross linking which is essential for collagen function
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7
Q

Fibrosis

A

too much collagen; after acute tissue injury; results in lack of organ function and lack of regeneration (esp in hearts, lungs, kidney, liver)

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8
Q

Basement Membrane Components

A
  • Collagen IV - form 2D network (C terminal is NC1 and N terminal is 7S domain)
  • Laminins- large glycoproteins that form heterotrimers
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9
Q

Basement Membrane Synthesis (4 steps)

A
  • 1- Laminin LG domain attaches to cell surface receptors
  • 2- Laminin globular domains interact w/ ea other forming network
  • 3- Other glycoproteins are added
  • 4- Whole thing is stabilized by collagen IV
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10
Q

Epidemolysis Bullosa

A
  • blistering disease of skin caused by defective anchoring of epidermis to dermis; severity depends on how deep the mutated structure is
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11
Q

Alport Syndrome

A

mutation in collagen IV —> glomerular basement membrane affected and cannot maintain filtration barrier —> proteins in urine

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12
Q

Acquired Disease of Basement Membrane

A
  • Diabetes - ILM (special basement membrane that sep retina from vitreous) thickens —> vision loss
  • Asthma - thickening of reticular basement membrane in airway
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13
Q

Proteoglycan Structure

A
  • Proteins w/ GAG side chains attached
  • Side chains are negatively charged so bind Na+ which brings water with it
  • So take up a large volume and resist compression
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14
Q

Pondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia

A
  • aggrecan mutation —> severe short stature cartilage and bone anomalies; growth plates are cartilage so dysfunctional growth plates —> long bone growth
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15
Q

4 Types of Proteoglycans

A
  • Intracellular - secretory granules
  • Cell surface - contribute to sugar coat (glycocalyx), can act as co-receptors go growth factors and can be shed to contribute to ECM
  • Pericellular - components of basement membrane; proteolytic products can lead to signaling
  • Extracellular - hyalectan, lectican, SLRPs
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16
Q

Elastic Fibers (structure and function)

A
  • Structure- made of microfibrils associated w/ proteins and elastin (similar to collagen - highly stable b/c extensive cross-linking)
  • Functions
    • Provides elasticity
    • Abundant in skin, blood vessels and lung
17
Q

Marfan Syndrome

A
  • tall stature, long limbs, chest deformities, lens dislocation, aortic aneurysm - fibrillin-1 mutation
18
Q

Elastin Mutations

A

Elastin mutations —> vascular weakness, arterial dissections, lax skin, etc

19
Q

How do ECM fibers stain?

A

Collagen - Mallory stains it blue

Reticular/Collagen III - silver stain makes them black

Elastic- Verhoeffs (black) or Orecein (reddish-brown)

20
Q

How do proteoglycans stain?

A

use PAS - makes carbs bright pink