Abstract

The structure of chitin made in vitro by chitin synthetase was studied by electron microscopy and electron diffraction. Two different forms of chitin synthetase from the fungus Mucor rouxii were tested: chitosomes and 16 S particles. The long chitin fibrils produced by chitosomes had a high degree of crystallinity as revealed by electron diffraction. Specimen regions made of largely parallel microfibril bundles produced distinct fiber diagrams, an indication that the chitin chains were aligned along the fibril axis. Microdiffractometry of the shorter chitin crystals synthesized by 16 S particles also showed a similar alignment of chitin chains. Calcofluor and Congo red were powerful inhibitors of chitin synthetase and had profound effects on the color, macroscopic texture, electron microscopic morphology, and crystal structure of the biosynthesized chitin. Chitin made in the presence of Congo red had a bright red color; the one made in the presence of Calcofluor was strongly fluorescent and had a distinctly blue hue when illuminated by daylight. The dyes were tightly bound to the chitin and could not be removed by washing with water or ethanol. At low dye concentration, a mixture of two kinds of crystals was produced by 16 S particles: some were of the same dimensions as those made in the absence of dyes, but others were much thinner. At high dye concentration, there were only thin crystals. With increasing concentrations of Calcofluor or Congo red, the typical electron diffraction reflections of α-chitin, particularly the strong equatorial band at 0.466 nm became fainter and a new additional reflection centered at 0.40 nm arose as the dominant feature of the patterns. We regard the gel-like material, synthesized at highly inhibitory dye concentrations, as an apposition complex where the dye does not form part of the crystal structure of chitin and the bulk of the complex consists of molecular stacks of dye associated with nascent chitin chains or narrow chitin microfibrils.

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