AbstractBackground: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the animal kingdom. The most abundant collagen, type I, readily forms fibrils that convey the principal mechanical support and structural organization in the extracellular matrix of connective tissues such as bone, skin, tendon, and vasculature. An understanding of the molecular arrangement of collagen in fibrils is essential since it relates molecular interactions to the mechanical strength of fibrous tissues and may reveal the underlying molecular pathology of numerous connective tissue diseases.Results: Using synchrotron radiation, we have conducted a study of the native fibril structure at anisotropic resolution (5.4 Å axial and 10 Å lateral). Th...
Collagen is the most abundant structural protein in vertebrates. The specific shape of its stress-st...
<p>A. The collagen-forming polypeptide chains contain a large helix-forming domain with the repeat a...
Type I collagen is an essential extracellular protein that plays an important structural role in tis...
Background: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the animal kingd...
AbstractBackground: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the anim...
The fibrous collagens are ubiquitous in animals and form the structural basis of all mammalian conne...
The structure formed by the packing of collagen molecules within fibrous tissue has been a matter of...
Collagen fibrils resemble smectic, liquid crystals in being highly ordered axially but relatively di...
AbstractBackground: Type I collagen contains specific lysine and hydroxylysine residues that are cri...
A knowledge of the structure of collagen fibrils is important for any rational discussion of the occ...
In this review, recent results from X-ray diffraction studies of tendon are used to develop an under...
Background: Type I collagen contains specific lysine and hydroxylysine residues that are critical in...
AbstractThe standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bund...
The extracellular matrix comprises structures that support the architectural organization of virtual...
Collagen is a very interesting protein. It has well-defined mechanical properties (great strength, r...
Collagen is the most abundant structural protein in vertebrates. The specific shape of its stress-st...
<p>A. The collagen-forming polypeptide chains contain a large helix-forming domain with the repeat a...
Type I collagen is an essential extracellular protein that plays an important structural role in tis...
Background: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the animal kingd...
AbstractBackground: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the anim...
The fibrous collagens are ubiquitous in animals and form the structural basis of all mammalian conne...
The structure formed by the packing of collagen molecules within fibrous tissue has been a matter of...
Collagen fibrils resemble smectic, liquid crystals in being highly ordered axially but relatively di...
AbstractBackground: Type I collagen contains specific lysine and hydroxylysine residues that are cri...
A knowledge of the structure of collagen fibrils is important for any rational discussion of the occ...
In this review, recent results from X-ray diffraction studies of tendon are used to develop an under...
Background: Type I collagen contains specific lysine and hydroxylysine residues that are critical in...
AbstractThe standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bund...
The extracellular matrix comprises structures that support the architectural organization of virtual...
Collagen is a very interesting protein. It has well-defined mechanical properties (great strength, r...
Collagen is the most abundant structural protein in vertebrates. The specific shape of its stress-st...
<p>A. The collagen-forming polypeptide chains contain a large helix-forming domain with the repeat a...
Type I collagen is an essential extracellular protein that plays an important structural role in tis...