Molecular Pathogenesis
Basement membranes. Basement membranes, the sheet-like structures that support epithelial and endothelial cells, are composed of several major and minor glycoproteins. Collagen IV is present ubiquitously in basement membranes, where it is the major collagenous component. Collagen IV molecules secreted by endothelial and epithelial cells self-associate into polygonal networks, which interact with laminin networks, as well as with nidogens, proteoglycans, and other glycoproteins, to form basement membranes.
Collagen IV. Collagen IV α chains share basic structural features and show extensive sequence homology. The major structural features of α(IV) chains are the following:
A (Gly)-X-Y collagenous domain of approximately 1,400 residues
A carboxy-terminal non-collagenous (NC1) domain of approximately 230 residues and 12 conserved cysteine residues, which participate in intrachain and interchain disulfide bonds
A non-collagenous amino terminal sequence of 15-20 residues
Approximately 20 interruptions of the collagenous triplet sequence are present in the collagenous domain.
Collagen IV chains form helical heterotrimers through associations between their COO- NC1 domains. The heterotrimers form networks through intermolecular interaction such as:
End-to-end linkages between the COO- NC1 domains of two heterotrimers;
Covalent interactions between four heterotrimers at their NH- ends; and
Lateral associations between heterotrimers via binding of the COO- domains to sites along the collagenous region of another heterotrimer.
Linkages between collagen IV molecules form a scaffolding for the deposition of other matrix glycoproteins and for cell attachment.
In the normal developing kidney:
Collagen α1(IV) and collagen α2(IV) chains predominate in the primordial glomerular basement membrane (GBM) of immature glomeruli.
The formation of capillary loops within the maturing glomeruli is associated with the appearance of collagen α3, α4, and α5(IV) chains in the GBM.
As glomerular maturation progresses, the α3, α4, and α5(IV) chains become the predominant collagen IV chains in GBM.
Mechanism of disease causation. Absence or underexpression of the collagen α3, α4, α5, and possibly α6(IV) chains in the basement membrane such that the networks that they form are absent – or, if present, are defective – cause the clinical features of Alport syndrome.
A pathogenic variant affecting one of the chains involved in the collagen IV α345 network can prevent basement membrane expression not only of that chain but of the other two chains as well. Similarly, a pathogenic variant involving the α5(IV) chain can interfere with basement membrane expression of the α6 chain.
Most missense collagen IV variants occur in glycine-encoding codons. The presence of a bulkier amino acid in a glycine position presumably creates a kink or an unfolding in the triple helix, as is observed in collagen α1(I) (see COL1A1/2-Related Osteogenesis Imperfecta and other genetic disorders of collagen). Abnormally folded collagen triple helices exhibit increased susceptibility to proteolytic degradation. The position of the substituted glycine, or the substituting amino acid itself, may influence protein folding and ultimately the severity of the clinical phenotype.
COL4A3- and COL4A4-specific laboratory technical considerations. Variants in COL4A3 and COL4A4 can be associated with either AR or AD disease. There is no specific association between the type of variant (e.g., missense, nonsense, splice site) and inheritance pattern.
Table 5.
Notable COL4A5 Pathogenic Variants
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Reference Sequences | DNA Nucleotide Change | Predicted Protein Change | Comment |
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NM_000495.3
NP_000486.1
| c.4692G>A | p.Cys1564Ser | Common in the United States |
c.4946T>G | p.Leu1649Arg |
c.5030G>A | p.Arg1677Gln |
Variants listed in the table have been provided by the author. GeneReviews staff have not independently verified the classification of variants.
GeneReviews follows the standard naming conventions of the Human Genome Variation Society (varnomen.hgvs.org). See Quick Reference for an explanation of nomenclature.