Type IV collagen

Collagen IV (ColIV or Col4) is a type of collagen found primarily in the basal lamina. The collagen IV C4 domain at the C-terminus is not removed in post-translational processing, and the fibers link head-to-head, rather than in parallel. Also, collagen IV lacks the regular glycine in every third residue necessary for the tight, collagen helix. This makes the overall arrangement more sloppy with kinks. These two features cause the collagen to form in a sheet, the form of the basal lamina. Collagen IV is the more common usage, as opposed to the older terminology of "type-IV collagen".[citation needed] Collagen IV exists in all metazoan phyla, to whom they served as an evolutionary stepping stone to multicellularity.[1]

There are six human genes associated with it:[2]

  1. ^ Boute N, Exposito JY, Boury-Esnault N, Vacelet J, Noro N, Miyazaki K, et al. (1996). "Type IV collagen in sponges, the missing link in basement membrane ubiquity". Biology of the Cell. 88 (1–2): 37–44. doi:10.1016/S0248-4900(97)86829-3. PMID 9175266. S2CID 32293092.
  2. ^ Khoshnoodi J, Pedchenko V, Hudson BG (May 2008). "Mammalian collagen IV". Microscopy Research and Technique. 71 (5): 357–370. doi:10.1002/jemt.20564. PMC 4788096. PMID 18219669.