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1.
Collagen fibrils type I display a typical banding pattern, so-called D-periodicity, of about 67 nm, when visualized by atomic force or electron microscopy imaging. Herein we report on a significant shortening of the D-period for human corneal collagen fibrils type I (21 ± 4 nm) upon air-drying, whereas no changes in the D-period were observed for human scleral collagen fibrils type I (64 ± 4 nm) measured under the same experimental conditions as the cornea. It was also found that for the corneal stroma fixed with glutaraldehyde and air-dried, the collagen fibrils show the commonly accepted D-period of 61 ± 8 nm. We used the atomic force microscopy method to image collagen fibrils type I present in the middle layers of human cornea and sclera. The water content in the cornea and sclera samples was varying in the range of .066–.085. Calculations of the D-period using the theoretical model of the fibril and the FFT approach allowed to reveal the possible molecular mechanism of the D-period shortening in the corneal collagen fibrils upon drying. It was found that both the decrease in the shift and the simultaneous reduction in the distance between tropocollagen molecules can be responsible for the experimentally observed effect. We also hypothesize that collagen type V, which co-assembles with collagen type I into heterotypic fibrils in cornea, could be involved in the observed shortening of the corneal D-period.  相似文献   

2.
Monoclonal antibodies that recognize an epitope within the triple helix of type III collagen have been used to examine the distribution of that collagen type in human skin, cornea, amnion, aorta, and tendon. Ultrastructural examination of those tissues indicates antibody binding to collagen fibrils in skin, amnion, aorta, and tendon regardless of the diameter of the fibril. The antibody distribution is unchanged with donor age, site of biopsy, or region of tissue examined. In contrast, antibody applied to adult human cornea localizes to isolated fibrils, which appear randomly throughout the matrix. These studies indicate that type III collagen remains associated with collagen fibrils after removal of the amino and carboxyl propeptides, and suggests that fibrils of skin, tendon, and amnion (and presumably many other tissues that contain both types I and III collagens) are copolymers of at least types I and III collagens.  相似文献   

3.
The collagen microstructure of the peripheral cornea is important in stabilizing corneal curvature and refractive status. However, the manner in which the predominantly orthogonal collagen fibrils of the central cornea integrate with the circumferential limbal collagen is unknown. We used microfocus wide-angle x-ray scattering to quantify the relative proportion and orientation of collagen fibrils over the human corneolimbal interface at intervals of 50 μm. Orthogonal fibrils changed direction 1–1.5 mm before the limbus to integrate with the circumferential limbal fibrils. Outside the central 6 mm, additional preferentially aligned collagen was found to reinforce the cornea and limbus. The manner of integration and degree of reinforcement varied significantly depending on the direction along which the limbus was approached. We also employed small-angle x-ray scattering to measure the average collagen fibril diameter from central cornea to limbus at 0.5 mm intervals. Fibril diameter was constant across the central 6 mm. More peripherally, fibril diameter increased, indicative of a merging of corneal and scleral collagen. The point of increase varied with direction, consistent with a scheme in which the oblique corneal periphery is reinforced by chords of scleral collagen. The results have implications for the cornea's biomechanical response to ocular surgeries involving peripheral incision.  相似文献   

4.
It has been suggested that dermal collagen fibrils with 67-nm periodicity consist of hybrids of type I and type III collagens. This is based on the assumption that all these banded fibrils are coated with type III collagen regardless of their diameter. However, conclusive evidence for this form of hybridization is lacking. In order to clarify this problem dermal collagen fibrils were disrupted into microfibrils using 8 M urea. Single and double indirect immunoelectron microscopy showed type III collagen at the periphery of intact collagen fibrils but no labeling with type I collagen antibodies, suggesting that the epitopes for this collagen were masked. Disrupted collagen fibrils revealed type I collagen throughout the fibril except for the periphery which was coated with type III collagen. Almost no type III collagen was noted in the interior of the collagen fibrils. Since type III collagen is present only at the periphery it suggests that this collagen has a different role than type I collagen and may have a regulatory function in fibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

5.
An investigation into the collagenous structure of the mature avian cornea is presented. Wide-angle X-ray diffraction is employed to assess collagen organization in 9-month-old chicken corneas. The central 2-4mm corneal region features a preponderance of fibrils directed along the superior-inferior and nasal-temporal orthogonal meridians. More peripherally the orientation of fibrils alters in favor of a predominantly tangential arrangement. The chicken cornea appears to be circumscribed by an annulus of fibrils that extends into the limbus. The natural arrangement of collagen in the chicken cornea is discussed in relation to corneal shape and the mechanical requirements of avian corneal accommodation. Equivalent data are also presented from age-matched blind chickens affected with the retinopathy, globe enlarged (rge) mutation, characterized by an abnormally thick and flat cornea. The data indicate considerable realignment and redistribution of collagen lamellae in the peripheral rge cornea. In contrast to normal chickens, no obvious tangential collagen alignment was evident in the periphery of rge corneas. In mammals, the presence of a limbal fibril annulus is believed to be important in corneal shape preservation. We postulate that corneal flattening in rge chickens may be related to biomechanical changes brought about by an alteration in collagen arrangement at the corneal periphery.  相似文献   

6.
This paper compares corneal development in the normal and in the Mov13 mutant mouse homozygote which does not synthesize type I collagen. During the period 12-14 days of development, there is no obvious difference between cellular organization in the normal and the mutant corneas or, indeed, elsewhere in the eye. In particular, there is normal colonization of the mutant cornea by the mesenchymal cells which will form the endothelium and the fibroblasts. In the early stages of stromal deposition (less than 14 days), when relatively little collagen is normally laid down, mutant and wild-type corneas differ only in that mutant collagen fibrils are less uniform than normal ones. Later development in the Mov13 mutant cannot usually be studied because almost all mutant embryos are dead by 14 days, but we now have two homozygous embryos from a single, 16-day litter. Their stromas obviously differed from those of their normal littermates: there was markedly less collagen in the mutant cornea and the collagen that was deposited lacked orthogonal organization. Fibril morphology also differed: the diameters of fibrils in the normal corneas peaked sharply at about 20 nm, whereas the diameters of mutant fibrils were spread over the range 5-15 nm, with only a small percentage overlapping the normal distribution. These results suggest that type I collagen is of negligible importance in controlling the cellular organization of the cornea, but has a dominant role in the formation of normal 20 nm fibrils and of normal stromal organization. They also show that, as collagen production is markedly lower in the mutant than in the wild-type cornea, the production of other collagens cannot compensate in any way for the lack of type I collagen.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,121(5):1181-1189
Previous work from our laboratories has demonstrated that: (a) the striated collagen fibrils of the corneal stroma are heterotypic structures composed of type V collagen molecules coassembled along with those of type I collagen, (b) the high content of type V collagen within the corneal collagen fibrils is one factor responsible for the small, uniform fibrillar diameter (25 nm) characteristic of this tissue, (c) the completely processed form of type V collagen found within tissues retains a large noncollagenous region, termed the NH2- terminal domain, at the amino end of its alpha 1 chain, and (d) the NH2- terminal domain may contain at least some of the information for the observed regulation of fibril diameters. In the present investigation we have employed polyclonal antibodies against the retained NH2- terminal domain of the alpha 1(V) chain for immunohistochemical studies of embryonic avian corneas and for immunoscreening a chicken cDNA library. When combined with cDNA sequencing and molecular rotary shadowing, these approaches provide information on the molecular structure of the retained NH2-terminal domain as well as how this domain might function in the regulation of fibrillar structure. In immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy analyses, the antibodies against the NH2-terminal domain react with type V molecules present within mature heterotypic fibrils of the corneal stroma. Thus, epitopes within at least a portion of this domain are exposed on the fibril surface. This is in marked contrast to mAbs which we have previously characterized as being directed against epitopes located in the major triple helical domain of the type V molecule. The helical epitopes recognized by these antibodies are antigenically masked on type V molecules that have been assembled into fibrils. Sequencing of the isolated cDNA clones has provided the conceptual amino acid sequence of the entire amino end of the alpha 1(V) procollagen chain. The sequence shows the location of what appear to be potential propeptidase cleavage sites. One of these, if preferentially used during processing of the type V procollagen molecule, can provide an explanation for the retention of the NH2-terminal domain in the completely processed molecule. The sequencing data also suggest that the NH2-terminal domain consists of several regions, providing a structure which fits well with that of the completely processed type V molecule as visualized by rotary shadowing.  相似文献   

8.
The spatial distribution of collagen fibrils in the corneal stroma is essential for corneal transparency and is primarily regulated by extrafibrillar proteoglycans, which are multi-functional polymers that interact with hybrid type I/V collagen fibrils. In order to understand more about proteoglycan organisation and collagen associations in the cornea, three-dimensional electron microscopy reconstructions of collagen-proteoglycan interactions in the anterior, mid and posterior stroma from a Chst5 knockout mouse, which lacks a keratan sulphate sulphotransferase, were obtained. Both longitudinal and transverse section show sinuous, oversized proteoglycans with near-periodic, orthogonal off-shoots. In many cases, these proteoglycans traverse over 400nm of interfibrillar space interconnecting over 10 collagen fibrils. The reconstructions suggest that multiple chondroitin sulphate/dermatan sulphate proteoglycans have aggregated laterally and, possibly, end-to-end, with orthogonal extensions protruding from the main electron-dense stained filament. We suggest possible mechanisms as to how sulphation differences may lead to this increase in aggregation of proteoglycans in the Chst5-null mouse corneal stroma and how this relates to proteoglycan packing in healthy corneas.  相似文献   

9.
Vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs), the major cellular constituent of the medial layer of an artery, synthesize the majority of connective tissue proteins, including fibrillar collagen types I, III, and V/XI. Proper collagen synthesis and deposition, which are important for the integrity of the arterial wall, require the antioxidant vitamin C. Vitamin C serves as cofactor for the enzymes prolyl and lysyl hydroxylase, which are responsible for the proper hydroxylation of collagen. Here, the role of type V collagen in the assembly of collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix (ECM) of cultured vascular SMCs was investigated. Treatment of SMCs with vitamin C resulted in a dramatic induction in the levels of the cell-layer associated pepsin-resistant type V collagen, whereas only a minor induction in the levels of types I and III collagen was detected. Of note, the deposition of type V collagen was accompanied by the formation of striated collagen fibrils in the ECM. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that type V collagen, but not type I collagen, became masked as collagen fibrils matured. Furthermore, the relative ratio of type V to type I collagen decreased as the ECM matured as a function of days in culture, and this decrease was accompanied by an increase in the diameter of collagen fibrils. Together these results suggest that the masking of type V collagen is caused by its internalization on continuous deposition of type I collagen on the exterior of the fibril. Furthermore, they suggest that type V collagen acts as framework for the initial assembly of collagen molecules into heterotypic fibrils, regulating the diameter and architecture of these fibrils.  相似文献   

10.
11.
A network of circumferentially oriented collagen fibrils exists in the periphery of the human cornea, and is thought to be pivotal in maintaining corneal biomechanical stability and curvature. However, it is unknown whether or not this key structural arrangement predominates throughout the entire corneal thickness or exists as a discrete feature at a particular tissue depth; or if it incorporates any elastic fibres and how, with respect to tissue depth, the circumcorneal annulus integrates with the orthogonally arranged collagen of the central cornea. To address these issues we performed a three-dimensional investigation of fibrous collagen and elastin architecture in the peripheral and central human cornea using synchrotron X-ray scattering and non-linear microscopy. This showed that the network of collagen fibrils circumscribing the human cornea is located in the posterior one-third of the tissue and is interlaced with significant numbers of mature elastic fibres which mirror the alignment of the collagen. The orthogonal arrangement of collagen in the central cornea is also mainly restricted to the posterior stromal layers. This information will aid the development of corneal biomechanical models aimed at explaining how normal corneal curvature is sustained and further predicting the outcome of surgical procedures.  相似文献   

12.
The extracellular matrix in tissues such as bone, tendon and cornea contains ordered, parallel arrays of collagen type I fibrils. Cells embedded in these matrices frequently co-align with the collagen fibrils, suggesting that ordered fibrils provide structural or signalling cues for cell polarization. To study mechanisms of matrix-induced cell alignment, we used nanoscopically defined two-dimensional matrices assembled of highly aligned collagen type I fibrils. On these matrices, different cell lines expressing integrin alpha(2)beta(1) polarized strongly in the fibril direction. In contrast, alpha(2)beta(1)-deficient cells adhered but polarized less well, suggesting a role of integrin alpha(2)beta(1) in the alignment process. Time-lapse atomic force microscopy (AFM) demonstrated that during alignment cells deform the matrix by reorienting individual collagen fibrils. Cells deformed the collagen matrix asymmetrically, revealing an anisotropy in matrix rigidity. When matrix rigidity was rendered uniform by chemical cross-linking or when the matrix was formed from collagen fibrils of reduced tensile strength, cell polarization was prevented. This suggested that both the high tensile strength and pliability of collagen fibrils contribute to the anisotropic rigidity of the matrix, leading to directional cellular traction and cell polarization. During alignment, cellular protrusions contacted the collagen matrix from below and above. This complex entanglement of cellular protrusions and collagen fibrils may further promote cell alignment by maximizing cellular traction.  相似文献   

13.
Type VI collagen is a nonfibrillar collagen present as a network throughout the chick secondary stroma. Immunolocalization of type VI collagen both in the chick corneal stroma and in other systems demonstrates that type VI collagen is present associated with cells and between striated fibrils. We hypothesize that type VI collagen may function in cell-matrix interactions important in corneal development. To examine this possibility, we have isolated and characterized bovine corneal type VI collagen and determined that the chain composition and morphology of type VI collagen isolated from cornea is similar to that isolated from other sources. The tissue form of type VI collagen was localized to filaments forming a network around fibrils and close to corneal fibroblasts. We then analyzed relative attachment and spreading on type VI collagen as compared to the other collagens present in the secondary stroma, and found that although corneal fibroblasts attach equally well to type VI and type I collagen, cells spread to a much greater extent on type VI collagen. Although corneal fibroblasts do have an RGD-dependent receptor which functions during adhesion to fibronectin, attachment to type VI collagen is RGD-independent unless the molecule is denatured. Blocking of the RGD-dependent receptor with soluble RGD peptides results in no change in attachment or spreading. These data imply a role for type VI collagen in cell-matrix interactions during corneal stroma development.  相似文献   

14.
Vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs), the major cellular constituent of the medial layer of an artery, synthesize the majority of connective tissue proteins, including fibrillar collagen types I, III, and V/XI. Proper collagen synthesis and deposition, which are important for the integrity of the arterial wall, require the antioxidant vitamin C. Vitamin C serves as cofactor for the enzymes prolyl and lysyl hydroxylase, which are responsible for the proper hydroxylation of collagen. Here, the role of type V collagen in the assembly of collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix (ECM) of cultured vascular SMCs was investigated. Treatment of SMCs with vitamin C resulted in a dramatic induction in the levels of the cell‐layer associated pepsin‐resistant type V collagen, whereas only a minor induction in the levels of types I and III collagen was detected. Of note, the deposition of type V collagen was accompanied by the formation of striated collagen fibrils in the ECM. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that type V collagen, but not type I collagen, became masked as collagen fibrils matured. Furthermore, the relative ratio of type V to type I collagen decreased as the ECM matured as a function of days in culture, and this decrease was accompanied by an increase in the diameter of collagen fibrils. Together these results suggest that the masking of type V collagen is caused by its internalization on continuous deposition of type I collagen on the exterior of the fibril. Furthermore, they suggest that type V collagen acts as framework for the initial assembly of collagen molecules into heterotypic fibrils, regulating the diameter and architecture of these fibrils. J. Cell. Biochem. 80:146–155, 2000. © 2000 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
The periodical D-band pattern is generally considered a unique ultrastructural feature shared by all fibril-forming collagens, which correlates with the intrafibril, paracrystalline array of tropocollagen monomers. Distinct band patterns have been reported, however, for collagen stained long-spacing (SLS) crystallites of genetic types I, II, and III. Moreover, D-band patterns of negatively stained, native type II collagen fibrils were found to be not identical to those of type I in our previous research. Because of (a) these distinctive features, (b) tropocollagen heterotrimeric conditions (type I) vs homotrimeric conditions (type II), and (c) different lengths and poor homology between extrahelical telopeptides, the molecular array or telopeptide conformation within the extensively studied type I collagen fibrils could be not the same as those in the very much less intensively studied type II collagen fibrils. In this investigation, a distinctive positive-staining D-band pattern was found for type II collagen fibrils obtained from human cartilages. A fibril model was developed by analyzing actual D-band patterns, and matching them against simulated patterns based on the primary structure of extrahelical and helical domains in human type II tropocollagen. In particular, a more prominent b(1) band was apparent in native type II collagen fibrils than in type I. This distinctive feature was also observed for native-type collagen fibrils reconstituted from purified type II collagen, i.e., free from associated minor type XI collagen. On modeling possible monomer arrays, the best fit between microdensitograms and simulation traces was found for 234 amino acid staggering, as is also the case for type I collagen fibrils. On comparing this model with an analogous one for type I collagen fibrils, there was a higher intraband distribution of charged residues for band b(1), consistent with the higher electrondensity observed for this band in type II collagen fibrils. N- and C-telopeptide displacement in the model corresponded to D-locations of a c(2) subband, which we named c(2.0), and band a(3), respectively. In simulation profiles, c(2.0) -like and a(3) -like peaks mimicked the corresponding peaks in microdensitograms when molecular reversals were adopted at positions 10N-12N, 12C-14C, and 17C-19C for N- and C-telopeptides. Hydrophobic interactions and algorithmic predictions of protein secondary structure, according to Chou and Fasman and Rost and Sander criteria, were consistent with these conformational models, and suggest that an additional molecular reversal may occur at positions 3N-5N. These telopeptide "S-fold" conformations, interpreted as axial projections of tridimensional conformation, may represent starting points for further investigation into the still unresolved tridimensional conformation of telopeptides in monomers arrayed within type II collagen fibrils.  相似文献   

16.
Patients with OI/EDS form a distinct subset of osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) patients. In addition to skeletal fragility, they have characteristics of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS). We identified 7 children with types III or IV OI, plus severe large and small joint laxity and early progressive scoliosis. In each child with OI/EDS, we identified a mutation in the first 90 residues of the helical region of alpha1(I) collagen. These mutations prevent or delay removal of the procollagen N-propeptide by purified N-proteinase (ADAMTS-2) in vitro and in pericellular assays. The mutant pN-collagen which results is efficiently incorporated into matrix by cultured fibroblasts and osteoblasts and is prominently present in newly incorporated and immaturely cross-linked collagen. Dermal collagen fibrils have significantly reduced cross-sectional diameters, corroborating incorporation of pN-collagen into fibrils in vivo. Differential scanning calorimetry revealed that these mutant collagens are less stable than the corresponding procollagens, which is not seen with other type I collagen helical mutations. These mutations disrupt a distinct folding region of high thermal stability in the first 90 residues at the amino end of type I collagen and alter the secondary structure of the adjacent N-proteinase cleavage site. Thus, these OI/EDS collagen mutations are directly responsible for the bone fragility of OI and indirectly responsible for EDS symptoms, by interference with N-propeptide removal.  相似文献   

17.
Collagen family of proteins   总被引:39,自引:0,他引:39  
Collagen molecules are structural macro-molecules of the extracellular matrix that include in their structure one or several domains that have a characteristic triple helical conformation. They have been classified by types that define distinct sets of polypeptide chains that can form homo- and heterotrimeric assemblies. All the collagen molecules participate in supramolecular aggregates that are stabilized in part by interactions between triple helical domains. Fourteen collagen types have been defined so far. They form a wide range of structures. Most notable are 1) fibrils that are found in most connective tissues and are made by alloys of fibrillar collagens (types I, II, III, V, and XI) and 2) sheets constituting basement membranes (type IV collagen), Descemet's membrane (type VIII collagen), worm cuticle, and organic exoskeleton of sponges. Other collagens, present in smaller quantities in tissues, play the role of connecting elements between these major structures and other tissue components. The fibril-associated collagens with interrupted triple helices (FACITs) (types IX, XII, and XIV) appear to connect fibrils to other matrix elements. Type VII collagen assemble into anchoring fibrils that bind epithelial basement membranes and entrap collagen fibrils from the underlying stroma to glue the two structures together. Type VI collagen forms thin-beaded filaments that may interact with fibrils and cells.  相似文献   

18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,135(5):1415-1426
A number of factors have been implicated in the regulation of tissue- specific collagen fibril diameter. Previous data suggest that assembly of heterotypic fibrils composed of two different fibrillar collagens represents a general mechanism regulating fibril diameter. Specifically, we hypothesize that type V collagen is required for the assembly of the small diameter fibrils observed in the cornea. To test this, we used a dominant-negative retroviral strategy to decrease the levels of type V collagen secreted by chicken corneal fibroblasts. The chicken alpha 1(V) collagen gene was cloned, and retroviral vectors that expressed a polycistronic mRNA encoding a truncated alpha 1(V) minigene and the reporter gene LacZ were constructed. The efficiency of viral infection was 30-40%, as determined by assaying beta- galactosidase activity. To assess the expression from the recombinant provirus, Northern analysis was performed and indicated that infected fibroblasts expressed high steady-state levels of retroviral mRNA. Infected cells synthesized the truncated alpha 1(V) protein, and this was detectable only intracellularly, in a distribution that colocalized with lysosomes. To assess endogenous alpha 1(V) protein levels, infected cell cultures were assayed, and these consistently demonstrated reductions relative to control virus-infected or uninfected cultures. Analyses of corneal fibril morphology demonstrated that the reduction in type V collagen resulted in the assembly of large- diameter fibrils with a broad size distribution, characteristics similar to fibrils produced in connective tissues with low type V concentrations. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated the amino- terminal domain of type V collagen was associated with the small- diameter fibrils, but not the large fibrils. These data indicate that type V collagen levels regulate corneal fibril diameter and that the reduction of type V collagen is sufficient to alter fibril assembly so that abnormally large-diameter fibrils are deposited into the matrix.  相似文献   

19.
In the avian embryo a matrix-mediated tissue interaction between retinal pigmented epithelium and neural crest-derived periocular mesenchyme leads to the differentiation of (scleral) cartilage. The composition of the extracellular matrix at the interface between these two tissues has been examined immunohistochemically, both during and after the interaction has taken place. Of the matrix components studied (fibronectin, laminin, and collagen types I, II, IV, and V) only collagen type II displayed a dramatic change in distribution between the two stages. During the interaction, at stage 15, type II was present in the extracellular compartment basal to the epithelium. After completion of the interaction, collagen type II was no longer detectable at the interface even though it was readily detectable in the vitreous humor, cornea, and perinotochordal sheath, and subsequently will be expressed by the chondrogenic tissue itself as overt differentiation commences. These results suggest that collagen type II might be causally involved in this particular epitheliomesenchymal interaction. Examination of the spatial and temporal patterns of collagen type II expression elsewhere in the developing craniofacial complex revealed a hitherto unreported pattern of distribution. In addition to its predictable locations (i.e., cornea, vitreous, and perinotochordal sheath) it was found to be present at certain other sites, for example, at the basal surfaces of some neuroepithelia. These additional locations are all known to be sites of chondrogenesis-promoting tissue interactions which result in the formation of the elements of the cartilaginous neurocranium (e.g., otic vesicle). Furthermore this spatial distribution exhibits a changing temporal pattern in that it is detectable at the time that the interactions are known to be taking place, but subsequently is no longer detectable by the immunohistochemical means employed. This definable pattern of transient collagen type II expression, occurring at very early stages of craniofacial development, is interpreted as reflecting one level of morphogenetic specification of chondrocranial/skull form in the developing vertebrate head.  相似文献   

20.
The physical properties of type I collagen were studied by electron microscopy of rotary shadowed collagen molecules and laser light scattering techniques. The physical properties, molecular structure and flexibility of type I collagen molecules from two structurally and functionally different connective tissues, cornea and sclera, were similar when measured in HCl, pH 2.0. The molecular weights were 328 and 298 × 102 for corneal and scleral type I collagen, respectively, while the values of TM were 33.7°C for both preparations. These values were in agreement with those obtained for other type I collagens. The higher level of glycosylation in corneal versus scleral type I collagen did not significantly modify the physical properties of type I collagen in acid solution or the charge distribution along the molecule as determined from the positively stained SLS banding patterns. Our morphological studies indicated that the collagen molecule, although relatively flexible based on electron microscopy, behaved as a long thin rod in solution. The mean end-to-end distances measured from electron micrographs were 253 and 256 nm for corneal and cler type I collagen, respectively, while the molecular contour lengths were 298 and 305 nm. The translational diffusion coefficients (0.849 and 0.857 × 10?7cm2s?1) were consistent with the contour lengths while the reported values in the literature for the rotational diffusion coefficient of type I collagen were consistent with the end-to-end distances. The intermediate value for molecular length obtained from the particle scattering factor (277 nm) reflects contributions from all possible molecular configurations.  相似文献   

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