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Featured researches published by James M. Pace.


Cell | 2006

CRTAP Is Required for Prolyl 3- Hydroxylation and Mutations Cause Recessive Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Roy Morello; Terry Bertin; Yuqing Chen; John Hicks; Laura Tonachini; Massimiliano Monticone; Patrizio Castagnola; Frank Rauch; Francis H. Glorieux; Janice A. Vranka; Hans Peter Bächinger; James M. Pace; Ulrike Schwarze; Peter H. Byers; MaryAnn Weis; Russell J. Fernandes; David R. Eyre; Zhenqiang Yao; Brendan F. Boyce; Brendan Lee

Prolyl hydroxylation is a critical posttranslational modification that affects structure, function, and turnover of target proteins. Prolyl 3-hydroxylation occurs at only one position in the triple-helical domain of fibrillar collagen chains, and its biological significance is unknown. CRTAP shares homology with a family of putative prolyl 3-hydroxylases (P3Hs), but it does not contain their common dioxygenase domain. Loss of Crtap in mice causes an osteochondrodysplasia characterized by severe osteoporosis and decreased osteoid production. CRTAP can form a complex with P3H1 and cyclophilin B (CYPB), and Crtap-/- bone and cartilage collagens show decreased prolyl 3-hydroxylation. Moreover, mutant collagen shows evidence of overmodification, and collagen fibrils in mutant skin have increased diameter consistent with altered fibrillogenesis. In humans, CRTAP mutations are associated with the clinical spectrum of recessive osteogenesis imperfecta, including the type II and VII forms. Hence, dysregulation of prolyl 3-hydroxylation is a mechanism for connective tissue disease.


Human Mutation | 2008

CRTAP AND LEPRE1 MUTATIONS IN RECESSIVE OSTEOGENESIS IMPERFECTA

Dustin Baldridge; Ulrike Schwarze; Roy Morello; Jennifer Lennington; Terry Bertin; James M. Pace; Melanie Pepin; MaryAnn Weis; David R. Eyre; Jennifer Walsh; Deborah M Lambert; Andrew Green; Haynes Robinson; Melonie Michelson; Gunnar Houge; Carl Lindman; Judith Martin; Jewell C. Ward; Emmanuelle Lemyre; John J. Mitchell; Deborah Krakow; David L. Rimoin; Daniel H. Cohn; Peter H. Byers; Brendan Lee

Autosomal dominant osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is caused by mutations in the genes (COL1A1 or COL1A2) encoding the chains of type I collagen. Recently, dysregulation of hydroxylation of a single proline residue at position 986 of both the triple‐helical domains of type I collagen α1(I) and type II collagen α1(II) chains has been implicated in the pathogenesis of recessive forms of OI. Two proteins, cartilage‐associated protein (CRTAP) and prolyl‐3‐hydroxylase‐1 (P3H1, encoded by the LEPRE1 gene) form a complex that performs the hydroxylation and brings the prolyl cis‐trans isomerase cyclophilin‐B (CYPB) to the unfolded collagen. In our screen of 78 subjects diagnosed with OI type II or III, we identified three probands with mutations in CRTAP and 16 with mutations in LEPRE1. The latter group includes a mutation in patients from the Irish Traveller population, a genetically isolated community with increased incidence of OI. The clinical features resulting from CRTAP or LEPRE1 loss of function mutations were difficult to distinguish at birth. Infants in both groups had multiple fractures, decreased bone modeling (affecting especially the femurs), and extremely low bone mineral density. Interestingly, “popcorn” epiphyses may reflect underlying cartilaginous and bone dysplasia in this form of OI. These results expand the range of CRTAP/LEPRE1 mutations that result in recessive OI and emphasize the importance of distinguishing recurrence of severe OI of recessive inheritance from those that result from parental germline mosaicism for COL1A1 or COL1A2 mutations. Hum Mutat 0, 1–8, 2008.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2001

Disruption of one intra-chain disulphide bond in the carboxyl-terminal propeptide of the proα1(I) chain of type I procollagen permits slow assembly and secretion of overmodified, but stable procollagen trimers and results in mild osteogenesis imperfecta

James M. Pace; Christine Kuslich; Marcia C. Willing; Peter H. Byers

Type I procollagen is a heterotrimer comprised of two proα1(I) chains and one proα2(I) chain. Chain recognition, association, and alignment of proα chains into correct registration are thought to occur through interactions between the C-terminal propeptide domains of the three chains. The C-propeptide of each chain contains a series of cysteine residues (eight in proα1(I) and seven in proα2(I)), the last four of which form intra-chain disulphide bonds. The remaining cysteine residues participate in inter-chain stabilisation. Because these residues are conserved, they are thought to be important for folding and assembly of procollagen. We identified a mutation (3897C→G) that substituted tryptophan for the cysteine at position 1299 in proα1(I) (C1299W, the first cysteine that participates in intra-chain bonds) and resulted in mild osteogenesis imperfecta. The patient was born with a fractured clavicle and four rib fractures. By 18 months of age he had had no other fractures and was on the 50th centile for length and weight. The probands mother, maternal aunt, and grandfather had the same mutation and had few fractures, white sclerae, and discoloured teeth, but their heights were within the normal range. In the patients cells the defective chains remained as monomers for over 80 minutes (about four times normal) and were overmodified. Some secreted procollagens were also overmodified but had normal thermal stability, consistent with delayed, but normal helix formation. This intra-chain bond may stabilise the C-propeptide and promote rapid chain association. Other regions of the C-propeptide thus play more prominent roles in chain registration and triple helix nucleation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Defective C-propeptides of the Proα2(I) Chain of Type I Procollagen Impede Molecular Assembly and Result in Osteogenesis Imperfecta

James M. Pace; Mary Wiese; Andrea S. Drenguis; Natalia Kuznetsova; Sergey Leikin; Ulrike Schwarze; Diana Chen; Suzanne Mooney; Sheila Unger; Peter H. Byers

Type I procollagen is a heterotrimer composed of two proα1(I) chains and one proα2(I) chain, encoded by the COL1A1 and COL1A2 genes, respectively. Mutations in these genes usually lead to dominantly inherited forms of osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) by altering the triple helical domains, but a few affect sequences in the proα1(I) C-terminal propeptide (C-propeptide), and one, which has a phenotype only in homozygotes, alters the proα2(I) C-propeptide. Here we describe four dominant mutations in the COL1A2 gene that alter sequences of the proα2(I) C-propeptide in individuals with clinical features of a milder form of the disease, OI type IV. Three of the four appear to interfere with disulfide bonds that stabilize the C-propeptide conformation and its interaction with other chains in the trimer. Cultured cells synthesized proα2(I) chains that were slow to assemble with proα1(I) chains to form heterotrimers and that were retained intracellularly. Some alterations led to the uncharacteristic formation of proα1(I) homotrimers. These findings show that the C-propeptide of proα2(I), like that of the proα1(I) C-propeptide, is essential for efficient assembly of type I procollagen heterotrimers. The milder OI phenotypes likely reflect a diminished amount of normal type I procollagen, small populations of overmodified heterotrimers, and proα1(I) homotrimers that are compatible with normal skeletal growth.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2002

A single amino acid substitution (D1441Y) in the carboxyl-terminal propeptide of the proα1(I) chain of type I collagen results in a lethal variant of osteogenesis imperfecta with features of dense bone diseases

James M. Pace; David Chitayat; Mary Atkinson; William R. Wilcox; Ulrike Schwarze; Peter H. Byers

Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is characterised by brittle bones and caused by mutations in the type I collagen genes, COL1A1 and COL1A2. We identified a mutation in the carboxyl-terminal propeptide coding region of one COL1A1 allele in an infant who died with an OI phenotype that differed from the usual lethal form and had regions of increased bone density. The newborn female had dysmorphic facial features, including loss of mandibular angle. Bilateral upper and lower limb contractures were present with multiple fractures in the long bones and ribs. The long bones were not compressed and their ends were radiographically dense. She died after a few hours and histopathological studies identified extramedullary haematopoiesis in the liver, little lamellar bone formation, decreased osteoclasts, abnormally thickened bony trabeculae with retained cartilage in long bones, and diminished marrow spaces similar to those seen in dense bone diseases such as osteopetrosis and pycnodysostosis. The child was heterozygous for a COL1A1 4321G→T transversion in exon 52 that changed a conserved aspartic acid to tyrosine (D1441Y). Abnormal proα1(I) chains were slow to assemble into dimers and trimers, and abnormal molecules were retained intracellularly for an extended period. The secreted type I procollagen molecules synthesised by cultured dermal fibroblasts were overmodified along the full length but had normal thermal stability. These findings suggest that the unusual phenotype reflected both a diminished amount of secreted type I procollagen and the presence of a population of stable and overmodified molecules that might support increased mineralisation or interfere with degradation of bone.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Critical Early Roles for col27a1a and col27a1b in Zebrafish Notochord Morphogenesis, Vertebral Mineralization and Post-embryonic Axial Growth

Helena E. Christiansen; Michael R. Lang; James M. Pace; David M. Parichy

Background Fibrillar collagens are well known for their links to human diseases, with which all have been associated except for the two most recently identified fibrillar collagens, type XXIV collagen and type XXVII collagen. To assess functions and potential disease phenotypes of type XXVII collagen, we examined its roles in zebrafish embryonic and post-embryonic development. Methodology/Principal Findings We identified two type XXVII collagen genes in zebrafish, col27a1a and col27a1b. Both col27a1a and col27a1b were expressed in notochord and cartilage in the embryo and early larva. To determine sites of type XXVII collagen function, col27a1a and col27a1b were knocked down using morpholino antisense oligonucleotides. Knockdown of col27a1a singly or in conjunction with col27a1b resulted in curvature of the notochord at early stages and formation of scoliotic curves as well as dysmorphic vertebrae at later stages. These defects were accompanied by abnormal distributions of cells and protein localization in the notochord, as visualized by transmission electron microscopy, as well as delayed vertebral mineralization as detected histologically. Conclusions/Significance Together, our findings indicate a key role for type XXVII collagen in notochord morphogenesis and axial skeletogenesis and suggest a possible human disease phenotype.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The NH2-terminal propeptide of type I procollagen acts intracellularly to modulate cell function

Anush Oganesian; Sandra Au; Jeremy A. Horst; Lars C. Holzhausen; Athena J. Macy; James M. Pace; Paul Bornstein

The function of the NH2-terminal propeptide of type I procollagen (N-propeptide) is poorly understood. We now show that a recombinant trimeric N-propeptide interacts with transforming growth factor-β1 and BMP2 and exhibits functional effects in stably transfected cells. The synthesis of N-propeptide by COS-7 cells results in an increase in phosphorylation of Akt and Smad3 and is associated with a marked reduction in type I procollagen synthesis and impairment in adhesion. In C2C12 cells, N-propeptide inhibits the osteoblastic differentiation induced by BMP2. Our data suggest that these effects are mediated by the interaction of N-propeptide with an intracellular receptor in the secretory pathway, because they are not observed when recombinant N-propeptide is added to the culture medium of either COS-7 or C2C12 cells. Both the binding of N-propeptide to cytokines and its functional properties are entirely dependent on the exon 2-encoded globular domain, and a mutation that substitutes a serine for a highly conserved cysteine in exon 2 abolishes its function. Our findings suggest that N-propeptide performs an important feedback regulatory function and provides a rationale for the prominence of a homotrimeric form of type I procollagen (α1 trimer) during vertebrate development.


Science | 2004

Gene Targeting in Stem Cells from Individuals with Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Joel R. Chamberlain; Ulrike Schwarze; Pei Rong Wang; Roli K. Hirata; Kurt D. Hankenson; James M. Pace; Robert A. Underwood; Kit M. Song; Michael D. Sussman; Peter H. Byers; David W. Russell


Matrix Biology | 2003

Identification, characterization and expression analysis of a new fibrillar collagen gene, COL27A1

James M. Pace; Marcella Corrado; Caterina Missero; Peter H. Byers


Matrix Biology | 2005

The new collagen gene COL27A1 contains SOX9-responsive enhancer elements

Elizabeth Jenkins; Jennie B. Moss; James M. Pace; Laura C. Bridgewater

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Peter H. Byers

University of Washington

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Brendan Lee

Baylor College of Medicine

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David R. Eyre

University of Washington

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Deborah Krakow

University of California

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Marcia C. Willing

Washington University in St. Louis

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Mary Atkinson

University of Washington

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MaryAnn Weis

University of Washington

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Paul Bornstein

University of Washington

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