首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Liquid crystallinity in condensed type I collagen solutions. A clue to the packing of collagen in extracellular matrices.
Authors:M M Giraud-Guille
Affiliation:Histophysique & Cytophysique EPHE, Observatoire Océanologique Université, Banyuls-ser-Mer, France.
Abstract:We recently described a new type of assembly of collagen molecules, forming typical liquid crystalline phases in highly concentrated solutions after sonication. The present work shows that intact 300 nm long collagen molecules also form cholesteric liquid crystalline domains, but the time required is much longer, several weeks instead of several days. Differential calorimetry and X-ray diffraction show that sonication does not alter the triple-helical structure of the collagen fragments. In the viscous solutions, observed between crossed polars in optical microscopy, the textures vary as a function of the concentration. Molecules first align near the air interface at the coverslip edge, then as the concentration increases by slow evaporation of the solvent, the birefringence extends inwards and liquid crystalline domains progressively appear. For concentrations estimated to be above 100 mg/ml, typical textures and defects of cholesteric phases are obtained, at lower concentrations zig-zag extinction patterns and banded patterns are observed; all these textures are described and interpreted. The cholesteric packing of collagen fibrils in various extracellular matrices is known, and the relationship that can be made between the ordered phases obtained with collagen molecules in vitro and the related geometrical structures observed between fibrils in vivo is thoroughly discussed.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号