Abstract

Collagens are essential components of extracellular matrices in multicellular animals. Fibrillar type II collagen is the most prominent component of articular cartilage and other cartilage-like tissues such as notochord. Its in situ macromolecular and packing structures have not been fully characterized, but an understanding of these attributes may help reveal mechanisms of tissue assembly and degradation (as in osteo- and rheumatoid arthritis). In some tissues such as lamprey notochord, the collagen fibrillar organization is naturally crystalline and may be studied by x-ray diffraction. We used diffraction data from native and derivative notochord tissue samples to solve the axial, D-periodic structure of type II collagen via multiple isomorphous replacement. The electron density maps and heavy atom data revealed the conformation of the nonhelical telopeptides and the overall D-periodic structure of collagen type II in native tissues, data that were further supported by structure prediction and transmission electron microscopy. These results help to explain the observed differences in collagen type I and type II fibrillar architecture and indicate the collagen type II cross-link organization, which is crucial for fibrillogenesis. Transmission electron microscopy data show the close relationship between lamprey and mammalian collagen fibrils, even though the respective larger scale tissue architecture differs.

Highlights

  • Type II collagen fibrils are major components of cartilage, intervertebral discs, and the vitreous humor of the eye and are vital to the normal development of bones and teeth

  • We found that suspensions greatly enhanced the clarity of the human type II collagen fibrils

  • X-ray Diffraction Data—A medium wide angle diffraction pattern from native type II collagen is shown in Fig. 1, with the central section containing the meridional series indicated

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Summary

Introduction

Type II collagen fibrils are major components of cartilage, intervertebral discs, and the vitreous humor of the eye and are vital to the normal development of bones and teeth. The model overlap region (0.53D) was longer collagen fibril parameters, and the telopeptide conformations than the experimentally determined value (0.42D), and the gap (in conjunction with the heavy atom labeling data).

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