SEQUENTIAL ASSEMBLY OF COLLAGEN REVEALED BY ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY

被引:86
|
作者
GALE, M
POLLANEN, MS
MARKIEWICZ, P
GOH, MC
机构
[1] UNIV TORONTO,DEPT CHEM,TORONTO,ON M5S 1A1,CANADA
[2] UNIV TORONTO,CTR RES NEURODEGENERAT DIS,TORONTO,ON M5S 1A1,CANADA
[3] UNIV TORONTO,DEPT PATHOL,TORONTO,ON M5S 1A1,CANADA
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80393-0
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
Most polymers which comprise biological filaments assemble by two mechanisms: nucleation and elongation or a sequential, stepwise process involving a hierarchy of intermediate species. We report the application of atomic force microscopy (AFM) to the study of the early events in the sequential or stepwise mode of assembly of a macromolecular filament. Collagen monomers were assembled in vitro and the early structural intermediates of the assembly process were examined by AFM and correlated with turbidimetric alterations in the assembly mixture. The assembly of collagen involved a sequence of distinctive filamentous species which increased in both diameter and length over the time course of assembly. The first discrete population of collagen oligomers were 1-2 nm in diameter (300-500 nm in length); at later time points, filaments similar to 2-6 nm in diameter (>10 mu m in length) many with a conspicuous similar to 67-nm axial period were observed. Occasional mature collagen fibrils with a similar to 67-nm axial repeat were found late in the course of assembly. Our results are consistent with initial end-to-end axial association of monomers to form oligomers followed by lateral association into higher-order filaments. On this basis, there appears to be at least two distinctive types of structural interactions (axial and lateral) which are operative at different levels in the assembly hierarchy of collagen.
引用
收藏
页码:2124 / 2128
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] MULTIMODE ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY OF COLLAGEN
    CHERNOFF, DA
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1993, 206 : 178 - POLY
  • [2] ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY STUDY OF THE COLLAGEN FIBER STRUCTURE
    REVENKO, I
    SOMMER, F
    MINH, DT
    GARRONE, R
    FRANC, JM
    BIOLOGY OF THE CELL, 1994, 80 (01) : 67 - 69
  • [3] ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY
    BINNIG, GK
    PHYSICA SCRIPTA, 1987, T19A : 53 - 54
  • [4] ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY
    BLANCHARD, CR
    CAMPBELL, JB
    ADVANCED MATERIALS & PROCESSES, 1995, 148 (02): : 62 - 62
  • [5] ACOUSTIC MICROSCOPY BY ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY
    RABE, U
    ARNOLD, W
    APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS, 1994, 64 (12) : 1493 - 1495
  • [6] Theory of atomic-force microscopy
    Sasaki, N
    Tsukada, M
    SCIENCE REPORTS OF THE RESEARCH INSTITUTES TOHOKU UNIVERSITY SERIES A-PHYSICS CHEMISTRY AND METALLURGY, 1997, 44 (01): : 1 - 15
  • [7] GROWTH-KINETICS OF HYDROXYAPATITE CRYSTAL REVEALED BY ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY
    ONUMA, K
    ITO, A
    TATEISHI, T
    KAMEYAMA, T
    JOURNAL OF CRYSTAL GROWTH, 1995, 154 (1-2) : 118 - 125
  • [8] DIRECT OBSERVATION OF THE ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY TIP USING INVERSE ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY IMAGING
    MONTELIUS, L
    TEGENFELDT, JO
    VANHEEREN, P
    JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY B, 1994, 12 (03): : 2222 - 2226
  • [9] Hierarchical assembly and the onset of banding in fibrous long spacing collagen revealed by atomic force microscopy
    Rainey, JK
    Wen, CK
    Goh, MC
    MATRIX BIOLOGY, 2002, 21 (08) : 647 - 660
  • [10] TWISTED RIBBON STRUCTURE OF PAIRED HELICAL FILAMENTS REVEALED BY ATOMIC-FORCE MICROSCOPY
    POLLANEN, MS
    MARKIEWICZ, P
    BERGERON, C
    GOH, MG
    NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING, 1994, 15 : S20 - S20