AbstractThe standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bundling. Collagen triple helices bundle into microfibrils, microfibrils bundle into subfibrils, and subfibrils bundle into fibrils, the basic structural unit of tendon. This model, developed primarily on the basis of x-ray diffraction results, is necessarily vague about the cross-sectional organization of fibrils and has led to the widespread assumption of laterally homogeneous closepacking. This assumption is inconsistent with data presented here. Using atomic force microscopy and micromanipulation, we observe how collagen fibrils from tendons behave mechanically as tubes. We conclude that the collagen fibril is an inhomogeneous structure compo...
While we are 70% water, in a very real sense collagen is the stuff we are made of. It is the most ab...
Background: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the animal kingd...
AbstractPolymers play an important role in many biological systems, so a fundamental understanding o...
ABSTRACT The standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bun...
ABSTRACT The standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bun...
AbstractThe standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bund...
AbstractThe formation of collagen fibers from staggered subfibrils still lacks a universally accepte...
AbstractBackground: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the anim...
Collagen fibrils resemble smectic, liquid crystals in being highly ordered axially but relatively di...
AbstractCollagen fibrils play an important role in the human body, providing tensile strength to con...
AbstractMicromechanical bending experiments using atomic force microscopy were performed to study th...
AbstractCollagen fibrils are nanostructured biological cables essential to the structural integrity ...
AbstractTendons are important load-bearing structures, which are frequently injured in both sports a...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
AbstractAlthough the mechanical behavior of tendon and bone has been studied for decades, there is s...
While we are 70% water, in a very real sense collagen is the stuff we are made of. It is the most ab...
Background: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the animal kingd...
AbstractPolymers play an important role in many biological systems, so a fundamental understanding o...
ABSTRACT The standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bun...
ABSTRACT The standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bun...
AbstractThe standard model for the structure of collagen in tendon is an ascending hierarchy of bund...
AbstractThe formation of collagen fibers from staggered subfibrils still lacks a universally accepte...
AbstractBackground: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the anim...
Collagen fibrils resemble smectic, liquid crystals in being highly ordered axially but relatively di...
AbstractCollagen fibrils play an important role in the human body, providing tensile strength to con...
AbstractMicromechanical bending experiments using atomic force microscopy were performed to study th...
AbstractCollagen fibrils are nanostructured biological cables essential to the structural integrity ...
AbstractTendons are important load-bearing structures, which are frequently injured in both sports a...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
AbstractAlthough the mechanical behavior of tendon and bone has been studied for decades, there is s...
While we are 70% water, in a very real sense collagen is the stuff we are made of. It is the most ab...
Background: The proteins belonging to the collagen family are ubiquitous throughout the animal kingd...
AbstractPolymers play an important role in many biological systems, so a fundamental understanding o...