Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Type I collagen

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Symbol
  
COL1A1

HUGO
  
2197

RefSeq
  
NM_000088

Entrez
  
1277

OMIM
  
120150

UniProt
  
P02452

Type I collagen Type I collagen


Type I collagen is the most abundant collagen of the human body which forms large, eosinophilic fibers known as collagen fibers. It is present in scar tissue, the end product when tissue heals by repair, as well as tendons, ligaments, the endomysium of myofibrils, the organic part of bone, the dermis, the dentin and organ capsules.

Contents

Formation

The COL1A1 gene produces the pro-alpha1(I) chain. This chain combines with another pro-alpha1(I) chain and also with a pro-alpha2(I) chain (produced by the COL1A2 gene) to make a molecule of type I procollagen. These triple-stranded, rope-like procollagen molecules must be processed by enzymes outside the cell. Once these molecules are processed, they arrange themselves into long, thin fibrils that cross-link to one another in the spaces around cells. The cross-links result in the formation of very strong mature type I collagen fibers.

Clinical significance

See Collagen, type I, alpha 1#Clinical significance

References

Type I collagen Wikipedia


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