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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Lumican Regulates Collagen Fibril Assembly: Skin Fragility and Corneal Opacity in the Absence of Lumican

TLDR
A crucial role is established for lumican in the regulation of collagen assembly into fibrils in various connective tissues and the development of a highly organized collagenous matrix and corneal transparency.
Abstract
Lumican, a prototypic leucine-rich proteoglycan with keratan sulfate side chains, is a major component of the cornea, dermal, and muscle connective tissues. Mice homozygous for a null mutation in lumican display skin laxity and fragility resembling certain types of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. In addition, the mutant mice develop bilateral corneal opacification. The underlying connective tissue defect in the homozygous mutants is deregulated growth of collagen fibrils with a significant proportion of abnormally thick collagen fibrils in the skin and cornea as indicated by transmission electron microscopy. A highly organized and regularly spaced collagen fibril matrix typical of the normal cornea is also missing in these mutant mice. This study establishes a crucial role for lumican in the regulation of collagen assembly into fibrils in various connective tissues. Most importantly, these results provide a definitive link between a necessity for lumican in the development of a highly organized collagenous matrix and corneal transparency.

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Aligned collagen is a prognostic signature for survival in human breast carcinoma.

TL;DR: It is proposed that quantifying collagen alignment is a viable, novel paradigm for the prediction of human breast cancer survival because of the strong statistical evidence for poor survival in patients with TACS and because the assessment can be performed in routine histopathological samples imaged via second harmonic generation or using picrosirius.
Journal ArticleDOI

Proteoglycan form and function: A comprehensive nomenclature of proteoglycans

TL;DR: The proposed nomenclature encompasses forty-three distinct proteoglycan-encoding genes and many alternatively-spliced variants and is based on three criteria: Cellular and subcellular location, overall gene/protein homology, and the utilization of specific protein modules within their respective protein cores.
Journal ArticleDOI

The biology of the small leucine-rich proteoglycans. Functional network of interactive proteins.

TL;DR: The focus is on the “functional network” created by these molecules in tissues, on genetic evidence for their functional roles during ontogeny, and on their activities as modulators of complex pathological processes such as fibrosis and cancer growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Composition and structure of articular cartilage: a template for tissue repair.

TL;DR: The authors review the structure and composition of articular cartilage, which is composed of an extensive extracellular matrix synthesized by chondrocytes and contains different zones with respect to depth from the articular surface.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Targeted Disruption of Decorin Leads to Abnormal Collagen Fibril Morphology and Skin Fragility

TL;DR: A fundamental role is demonstrated for decorin in regulating collagen fiber formation in vivo in mice harboring a targeted disruption of the decorin gene, which provides an explanation for the reduced tensile strength of the skin.
Journal ArticleDOI

The structure and transparency of the cornea

TL;DR: The treatment of the problem of transparency and its solution, as given in this paper, have been the subject of a brief preliminary report (Maurice, 1954).
Journal ArticleDOI

Specific inhibition of type I and type II collagen fibrillogenesis by the small proteoglycan of tendon.

TL;DR: The small dermatan sulphate proteoglycan of bovine tendon demonstrated a unique ability to inhibit fibrillogenesis of both type I and type II collagen from bovines tendon and cartilage respectively in an assay performed in vitro, suggesting that interactions between collagen and proteoglycans may be quite specific both for the type of proteogly can and its tissue of origin.
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