Circadian and permanent pools of extracellular matrix co-exist in tendon tissue, but have distinct rates of turnover and differential responses to ageing

Anna Hoyle, Joan Chang, Marie FA Cutiongco, Ronan O'Cualain, Stacey Warwood, David Knight, Qing-Jun Meng, Karl E Kadler, Joe Swift
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Abstract

Heavy carbon isotopes in the tendons of people who grew up in the age of nuclear bomb testing have shown that the extracellular matrix (ECM), assembled during development, stays with us for life. However, recent work suggests that type-I collagen in ECM-rich mouse tendon exists in two pools: a permanent matrix, and a more soluble, circadian-regulated matrix. Despite this, the underlying regulation of such distinct pools is not understood. Here, we demonstrate using stable isotope labelling coupled with mass spectrometry proteomics that circadian and permanent matrix pools have significantly different half-lives. Furthermore, the properties of the matrix pools are altered during development and ageing. Tail tendon tissue was harvested from mice fed on a heavy-lysine diet; protein was then extracted for analysis using a sequential two-step protocol. The first, soluble fraction (F1) was found to contain intracellular proteins, and a range of core and associated extracellular matrix proteins, including a pool of type-I collagen shown to be circadian-regulated. The remaining fraction (F2) contained primarily collagens, including type-I collagen which did not show rhythmicity. In adult mice, matrix proteins extracted in the F1 pool had significantly shorter half-lives than F2, including type-I collagen which had half-lives of 4 ± 2 days in F1, compared to 700 ± 100 days in F2. Circadian-regulated matrix proteins were found to have significantly faster turnover than non-circadian in adult mice, but this distinction was lost in older animals. This work identifies protein turnover as the underlying mechanism for the circadian/permanent model of tendon matrix, and suggests a loss of circadian regulation as a characteristic of ECM ageing.
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肌腱组织中同时存在细胞外基质的昼夜节律池和永久性池,但它们的周转率不同,对老化的反应也不同
在核弹试验时代长大的人的肌腱中的重碳同位素表明,在发育过程中形成的细胞外基质(ECM)会伴随我们一生。然而,最近的研究表明,在富含 ECM 的小鼠肌腱中,I 型胶原蛋白存在于两个池中:一个是永久性基质,另一个是可溶性更强、受昼夜节律调节的基质。尽管如此,人们仍不了解这种不同池的基本调控机制。在这里,我们利用稳定同位素标记和质谱蛋白质组学证明,昼夜节律基质池和永久基质池的半衰期明显不同。此外,基质池的特性在发育和老化过程中会发生改变。从小鼠尾肌腱组织中获取重赖氨酸饮食,然后采用连续两步法提取蛋白质进行分析。第一个可溶性部分(F1)含有细胞内蛋白质、一系列核心蛋白质和相关细胞外基质蛋白质,其中包括一个Ⅰ型胶原蛋白池,该蛋白池显示受昼夜节律调控。其余部分(F2)主要含有胶原蛋白,包括未显示节律性的 I 型胶原蛋白。在成年小鼠体内,F1池中提取的基质蛋白的半衰期明显短于F2,其中I型胶原蛋白在F1中的半衰期为4±2天,而在F2中为700±100天。研究发现,在成年小鼠体内,昼夜节律调控基质蛋白的周转速度明显快于非昼夜节律调控基质蛋白,但这种区别在年长动物体内消失了。这项工作确定了蛋白质周转是肌腱基质昼夜节律/永久模型的基本机制,并表明昼夜节律调节的丧失是 ECM 老化的一个特征。
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