posted on 2025-02-04, 07:44authored byMark A.
B. Kreutzberger, Le Tracy Yu, Thi H. Bui, Maria C. Hancu, Michael D. Purdy, Tomasz Osinski, Peter M. Kasson, Edward H. Egelman, Jeffrey D. Hartgerink
Collagens are ubiquitous
in biology: functioning as the backbone
of the extracellular matrix, forming the primary structural components
of key immune system complexes, and fulfilling numerous other structural
roles in a variety of systems. Despite this, there is limited understanding
of how triple helices, the basic collagen structural units, pack into
collagenous assemblies. Here we use a peptide self-assembly system
to design collagenous assemblies based on the C1q collagen-like region.
Using cryo-EM we solved a structure of one assembly to 3.5 Å
resolution and built an atomic model. From this, we identify a triple
helix conformation with no superhelical twist, starkly in contrast
to the canonical right-handed triple helix. This nontwisting region
allows for unique hydroxyproline stacking between adjacent triple
helices and also results in the formation of an exposed cavity with
rings of hydrophobic amino acids packed symmetrically. We find no
precedent for such an arrangement of collagen triple helices and designed
assemblies with substituted amino acids in various locations to probe
key stabilizing amino acid interactions in the complex. The stability
of these altered complexes behaves as predicted by our atomic model.
Our findings, combined with the extremely limited experimental structural
data on triple helix packing in the literature, suggest that collagen
and collagen-like assemblies may adopt a far more varied conformational
landscape than previously appreciated. We hypothesize that this is
particularly likely in packed assemblies of triple helices, adjacent
to the termini of these helices and at discontinuities in the required
Xaa-Yaa-Gly repeating primary sequence, a discontinuity found in the
majority of this class of proteins and in many collagen-associated
diseases.