Cyclophilin B deficiency causes abnormal dentin collagen matrix

M Terajima, Y Taga, WA Cabral… - Journal of proteome …, 2017 - ACS Publications
M Terajima, Y Taga, WA Cabral, M Nagasawa, N Sumida, S Hattori, JC Marini, M Yamauchi
Journal of proteome research, 2017ACS Publications
Cyclophilin B (CypB) is an endoplasmic reticulum-resident protein that regulates collagen
folding, and also contributes to prolyl 3-hydroxylation (P3H) and lysine (Lys) hydroxylation of
collagen. In this study, we characterized dentin type I collagen in CypB null (KO) mice, a
model of recessive osteogenesis imperfecta type IX, and compared to those of wild-type
(WT) and heterozygous (Het) mice. Mass spectrometric analysis demonstrated that the
extent of P3H in KO collagen was significantly diminished compared to WT/Het. Lys …
Cyclophilin B (CypB) is an endoplasmic reticulum-resident protein that regulates collagen folding, and also contributes to prolyl 3-hydroxylation (P3H) and lysine (Lys) hydroxylation of collagen. In this study, we characterized dentin type I collagen in CypB null (KO) mice, a model of recessive osteogenesis imperfecta type IX, and compared to those of wild-type (WT) and heterozygous (Het) mice. Mass spectrometric analysis demonstrated that the extent of P3H in KO collagen was significantly diminished compared to WT/Het. Lys hydroxylation in KO was significantly diminished at the helical cross-linking sites, α1/α2(I) Lys-87 and α1(I) Lys-930, leading to a significant increase in the under-hydroxylated cross-links and a decrease in fully hydroxylated cross-links. The extent of glycosylation of hydroxylysine residues was, except α1(I) Lys-87, generally higher in KO than WT/Het. Some of these molecular phenotypes were distinct from other KO tissues reported previously, indicating the dentin-specific control mechanism through CypB. Histological analysis revealed that the width of predentin was greater and irregular, and collagen fibrils were sparse and significantly smaller in KO than WT/Het. These results indicate a critical role of CypB in dentin matrix formation, suggesting a possible association between recessive osteogenesis imperfecta and dentin defects that have not been clinically detected.
ACS Publications