Human Interaction Network Ontology

Last uploaded: June 27, 2014
Preferred Name

Collagen type V degradation by MMP2,9,10
Synonyms
Definitions

Type V collagen is a fibril-forming collagen forming a group with collagen types I, II, III and XI (Gelse et al. 2003). Three different alpha chains exist that can combine in three distinct trimers. Collagen V forms fibrils that are associated with type I and to a lesser extent III collagen, as a minor but critical component of bone matrix, corneal stroma and the interstitial matrix of muscle, liver, lung and placenta (Birk et al. 1988). COL5A1-/- mice have an almost complete lack of collagen fibrils reflecting a central role in fibrillogenesis (Wenstrup et al. 2004). Type V collagen mutation results in a range of connective tissue diseases including Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS), which is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by joint hypermobility and skin hyperextensibility, thinness and fragility. These result from mutations in the COL5A1 and COL5A2 genes (Michalickova et al. 1998, Schwarze et al. 2000). Type V collagen is digested by MMP2 (Murphy et al. 1981, Veidal et al. 2011), MMP10 (Nicholson et al. 1989), and MMP9 (Murphy et al. 1982, Watanabe et al. 1993, Pourmotabbed et al. 1994, Niyibizi et al. 1994, Veidal et al. 2011). Edited: Jupe, S, 2012-11-12 Authored: Jupe, S, 2011-07-12 Reviewed: Sorsa, Timo, 2012-10-08

ID

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0021657

comment

Type V collagen is a fibril-forming collagen forming a group with collagen types I, II, III and XI (Gelse et al. 2003). Three different alpha chains exist that can combine in three distinct trimers. Collagen V forms fibrils that are associated with type I and to a lesser extent III collagen, as a minor but critical component of bone matrix, corneal stroma and the interstitial matrix of muscle, liver, lung and placenta (Birk et al. 1988). COL5A1-/- mice have an almost complete lack of collagen fibrils reflecting a central role in fibrillogenesis (Wenstrup et al. 2004). Type V collagen mutation results in a range of connective tissue diseases including Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS), which is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by joint hypermobility and skin hyperextensibility, thinness and fragility. These result from mutations in the COL5A1 and COL5A2 genes (Michalickova et al. 1998, Schwarze et al. 2000). Type V collagen is digested by MMP2 (Murphy et al. 1981, Veidal et al. 2011), MMP10 (Nicholson et al. 1989), and MMP9 (Murphy et al. 1982, Watanabe et al. 1993, Pourmotabbed et al. 1994, Niyibizi et al. 1994, Veidal et al. 2011).

Edited: Jupe, S, 2012-11-12

Authored: Jupe, S, 2011-07-12

Reviewed: Sorsa, Timo, 2012-10-08

definition source

Pubmed9425231

Pubmed15383546

Pubmed3346334

Pubmed8314909

Reactome, http://www.reactome.org

Pubmed8037728

Pubmed10796876

Pubmed6285893

Pubmed2548603

Pubmed8305481

Pubmed22382088

Pubmed14623400

Pubmed7041891

has input

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0006349

has output

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0005932

label

Collagen type V degradation by MMP2,9,10

prefixIRI

HINO:0021657

prefLabel

Collagen type V degradation by MMP2,9,10

seeAlso

EC Number: 3.4.21

ReactomeREACT_150374

Reactome Database ID Release 431564164

subClassOf

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/INO_0000040

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