Abstract

Elastic fibers comprising fibrillin microfibrils and elastin are present in many tissues, including the skin, lungs, and arteries, where they confer elasticity and resilience. Although fibrillin microfibrils play distinct and tissue-specific functional roles, it is unclear whether their ultrastructure and composition differ between elastin-rich (skin) and elastin-poor (ciliary body and zonule) organs or after in vitro synthesis by cultured cells. Here, we used atomic force microscopy, which revealed that the bead morphology of fibrillin microfibrils isolated from the human eye differs from those isolated from the skin. Using newly developed pre-MS preparation methods and LC-MS/MS, we detected tissue-specific regions of the fibrillin-1 primary structure that were differentially susceptible to proteolytic extraction. Comparing tissue- and culture-derived microfibrils, we found that dermis- and dermal fibroblast–derived fibrillin microfibrils differ in both bead morphology and periodicity and also exhibit regional differences in fibrillin-1 proteolytic susceptibility. In contrast, collagen VI microfibrils from the same dermal or fibroblast samples were invariant in ultrastructure (periodicity) and protease susceptibility. Finally, we observed that skin- and eye-derived microfibril suspensions were enriched in elastic fiber– and basement membrane–associated proteins, respectively. LC-MS/MS also identified proteins (such as calreticulin and protein-disulfide isomerase) that are potentially fundamental to fibrillin microfibril biology, regardless of their tissue source. Fibrillin microfibrils synthesized in cell culture lacked some of these key proteins (MFAP2 and -4 and fibrillin-2). These results showcase the structural diversity of these key extracellular matrix assemblies, which may relate to their distinct roles in the tissues where they reside.

Highlights

  • Elastic fibers comprising fibrillin microfibrils and elastin are present in many tissues, including the skin, lungs, and arteries, where they confer elasticity and resilience

  • Comparing tissue- and culture-derived microfibrils, we found that dermis- and dermal fibroblast– derived fibrillin microfibrils differ in both bead morphology and periodicity and exhibit regional differences in fibrillin-1 proteolytic susceptibility

  • This study observed that newly synthesized fibrillin microfibrils derived from HDFs had a different bead morphology and periodicity compared with native skin-microfibrils

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Summary

Introduction

Elastic fibers comprising fibrillin microfibrils and elastin are present in many tissues, including the skin, lungs, and arteries, where they confer elasticity and resilience. We go on to test differences between the ultrastructure (bead morphology and interbead periodicity) using AFM and biomolecular composition (fibrillin-1 structural and enzymatic susceptibly and associated protein presence) using MS of fibrillin microfibrils isolated from human eye (CB), human skin, and cultured human dermal fibroblasts (HDFs). These regional differences indicate that, eral regions of human eye-derived fibrillin-1 (Fig. 3) with dif- are fibrillin microfibrils ultrastructurally variable fering susceptibilities to elastase in comparison with skin-de- between tissues, but their fibrillin-1 structure may be as

Results
Conclusion

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