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Gla-rich protein (GRP), a new vitamin K-dependent protein identified from sturgeon cartilage and highly conserved in vertebrates
Publication . S B Viegas, Carla; Simes, D; Laizé, Vincent; Williamson, M. K.; Price, P. A.; Cancela, Leonor
We report the isolation of a novel vitamin K-dependent protein from the calcified cartilage of Adriatic sturgeon (Acipenser
nacarii). This 10.2-kDa secreted protein contains 16 -carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) residues in its 74-residue sequence, the highest Gla percent of any known protein, and
we have therefore termed it Gla-rich protein (GRP). GRP has a high charge density (36 negative 16 positive 20 net negative) yet is insoluble at neutral pH. GRP has orthologs in all taxonomic groups of vertebrates, and a paralog (GRP2) in
bony fish; no GRP homolog was found in invertebrates. There is no significant sequence homology between GRP and the
Gla-containing region of any presently known vitamin K-dependent protein. Forty-seven GRP sequences were obtained by a combination of cDNA cloning and comparative genomics: all 47 have a propeptide that contains a -carboxylase recognition site and a mature protein with 14 highly conserved
Glu residues, each of them being carboxylated in sturgeon. The protein sequence of GRP is also highly conserved,
with 78% identity between sturgeon and human GRP.
Analysis of the corresponding gene structures suggests a highly constrained organization, particularly for exon 4, which encodes the core Gla domain. GRP mRNA is found in virtually all rat and sturgeon tissues examined, with the highest
expression in cartilage. Cells expressing GRP include chondrocytes, chondroblasts, osteoblasts, and osteocytes.
Because of its potential to bind calcium through Gla residues, we suggest that GRP may regulate calcium in the extracellular
environment.
Sturgeon osteocalcin shares structural features with matrix gla protein evolutionary relationship and functional implications
Publication . S B Viegas, Carla; Simes, Dina; Williamson, Matthew K.; Cavaco, Sofia; Laizé, Vincent; Price, Paul A.; Leonor Cancela, M.
Osteocalcin (OC) and matrix Gla protein (MGP) are considered evolutionarily related because they share key structural features, although they have been described to exert different functions. In this work, we report the identification and characterization of both OC and MGP from the Adriatic sturgeon, a ray-finned fish characterized by a slow evolution and the retention of many ancestral features. Sturgeon MGP shows a primary structure, post-translation modifications, and patterns of mRNA/protein distribution and accumulation typical of known MGPs, and it contains seven possible Gla residues that would make the sturgeon protein the most gamma-carboxylated among known MGPs. In contrast, sturgeon OC was found to present a hybrid structure. Indeed, although exhibiting protein domains typical of known OCs, it also contains structural features usually found in MGPs (e. g. a putative phosphorylated propeptide). Moreover, patterns of OC gene expression and protein accumulation overlap with those reported for MGP; OC was detected in bone cells and mineralized structures but also in soft and cartilaginous tissues. We propose that, in a context of a reduced rate of evolution, sturgeon OC has retained structural features of the ancestral protein that emerged millions of years ago from the duplication of an ancient MGP gene and may exhibit intermediate functional features.
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
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SFRH
Funding Award Number
SFRH/BD/9077/2002