Publication | Closed Access
Subfibrillar architecture and functional properties of collagen: a comparative study in rat tendons.
40
Citations
21
References
1990
Year
Tissue EngineeringCollagen FibrilsEngineeringMechanotransductionUniform Collagen FibrilsBiomedical EngineeringOrthopedic BiomechanicsOrthopaedic SurgeryCollagen Fibril FunctionBiomechanicsSubfibrillar ArchitectureMatrix BiologyBiophysicsRat TendonsMechanobiologyMusculoskeletal TissueMechanosensingComparative StudyFracture HealingWound HealingMedicineBiomaterialsTendon InjuryExtracellular Matrix
Collagen fibrils from different rat tendons have been investigated by freeze-fracture and transmission electron microscopy. In all cases, marked differences in both fibril morphology and subfibrillar organisation have been consistently found between the tendon core (composed of large and heterogeneous fibrils comprising tightly-packed, straight, parallel molecules) and sheath (showing small, uniform collagen fibrils with a helical arrangement of the molecules). The bio-mechanical requirements to which these tissues are subjected suggest, as do previous observations on other tissues, that a causal correlation exists between substructure and collagen fibril function.
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