Bone sialoprotein
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| Integrin-binding bone sialoprotein (ibsp, bone sialoprotein, bsp, bspII, spII)
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| Identifiers | |
| Symbol | IBSP |
| Entrez | 3381 |
| HUGO | 5341 |
| OMIM | 147563 |
| RefSeq | NP_004958.1 |
| UniProt | P21815 |
| Other data | |
| Locus | Chr. 4 q21-q25 |
Bone sialoprotein (BSP) is a component of mineralized tissues such as bone, dentin, cementum and calcified cartilage. BSP is a significant component of the bone extracellular matrix and has been suggested to constitute approximately 8% of all non-collagenous proteins found in bone and cementum [1]. BSP was originally isolated from bovine cortical bone as a 23-kDa glycopeptide with high sialic acid content, as described in separate reports by Williams and Peacocke [1] and Andrews and Herring [1] in 1965. Native BSP has an apparent molecular weight of 60-80 kDa based on SDS-PAGE, which is a considerable deviation from the predicted weight (based on cDNA sequence) of approximately 33 kDa [1]. The mammalian BSP cDNAs encode for proteins averaging 327 amino acids, which includes the 16-residue preprotein secretory signal peptide. Among the mammalian cDNAs currently characterized, there is an approximate 45% conservation of sequence identity and a further 10-23% conservative substitution. The protein is highly acidic (pKa of ~ 3.9) [1] and contains a large amount of Glu residues, constituting ~22% of the total amino acid.
Structure
Secondary structure prediction and hydrophobicity analyses suggest that the primary sequence of BSP has an open, flexible structure with the potential to form regions of α-helix and some β-sheet [1]. However, the majority of studies have demonstrated that BSP has no α-helical or β-sheet structure by 1D NMR [1] [1] and circular dichroism [1]. Analysis of native protein by electron microscopy confirm that the protein has an extended structure approximately 40 nm in length [1]. This flexible conformation suggests that the protein has few structural domains, however it has been suggested that there may be several spatially-segmented functional domains including a hydrophobic collagen-binding domain (rattus norvegicus residues 36-57) [1], a hydroxyapatite-nucleating region of contiguous glutamic acid residues (rattus norvegicus residues 78-85, 155-164) [1] and a classical integrin-binding motif (RGD) near the C-terminal (rattus norvegicus residues 288-291).
BSP has been demonstrated to be extensively post-translationally modified, with carbohydrates and other modifications comprising approximately 50% of the molecular weight of the native protein [1][1][1]. These modifications, which include N- and O-linked glycosylation, tyrosine sulfation and serine and threonine phosphorylation, make the protein highly heterogeneous.
Function
The amount of BSP in bone and dentin is roughly equal,[1] however the function of BSP in these mineralized tissues is not known. One possibility is that BSP acts as a nucleus for the formation of the first apatite crystals.[1].As the apatite forms along the collagen fibres with in the extracellular matrix, BSP could then help direct, redirect or inhibit the crystal growth.

