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Endoplasmic reticulum stress and collagenous formation anomalies in vascular-type Ehlers-Danlos syndrome via electron microscopy.

Satoko IshikawaTomoki KoshoTomoko KaminagaManabu MiyamotoYoichiro HamasakiShigemi YoshiharaShujiro HayashiKen Igawa
Published in: The Journal of dermatology (2021)
Vascular-type Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (vEDS) is an autosomal-dominant inherited disorder caused by a deficit in collagen III. It results from heterogeneous mutations in the α1 collagen III gene (COL3A1) and is associated with life-threatening complications, even in younger patients. However, the details of the pathogenesis underlying the COL3A1 mutation causing vEDS remain unclear. Here, we focus on anomalies in collagen fiber size and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response in patients with vEDS using electron microscopy (EM). We discovered that although the infants did not have vEDS, collagenous formations were similar to their samples in vEDS. Moreover, we examined the expression of activating transcription factor 6 (ATF6) as an ER stress marker and cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP) as a binding partner protein for collagen fibrils in the dermis and COL3A1. The expression levels of ATF6 in the vEDS group were significantly higher than in infants and controls; COMP and COL3A1 levels were significantly lower. The fragile collagen fibrils in vEDS might form as a result of ER stress and that small, newly formed collagen fibrils may appear. This research revealed a novel prospect regarding an issue that has been unclear for a long time, which is the reason for the abnormal sizes of collagenous fibrils in vEDS.
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