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Research Article

Collagen fibril formation during embryogenesis

R Fleischmajer, B R Olsen, R Timpl, J S Perlish, and O Lovelace
PNAS June 1, 1983 80 (11) 3354-3358; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.80.11.3354
R Fleischmajer
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B R Olsen
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R Timpl
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J S Perlish
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O Lovelace
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Abstract

Chicken embryo skin of different ages and adult skin were labeled with antibodies against the amino propeptide and carboxyl propeptide of type I collagen and processed for indirect immunoelectron microscopy by the ferritin technique. The results indicate that the formation of thin collagen fibrils involves polymerization of pN-collagen. Fibrils that are thicker than 35-40 nm do not appear to contain the amino propeptide. How fibrils increase in size is not clear, but growth may involve mechanisms such as lateral aggregation of subfibril structures or fusion of thin fibrils. Carboxyl propeptides were localized near or in contact with thin collagen fibrils, but they did not appear to be arranged in a periodic manner along the fibrils. In experiments using antibodies against the amino propeptides of type III collagen, fibrils 20-40 nm in diameter were also labeled in a periodic fashion. pN-Collagen chains were extracted from embryonic skin and identified by NaDodSO4/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by immunoblotting. The presence of significant amounts of pN-collagen in skin from 10- and 12-day chicken embryos agreed well with the labeling of amino propeptides by immunoelectron microscopy. This study provides evidence for the role of the amino propeptide in collagen fibrillogenesis in embryonic skin.

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Collagen fibril formation during embryogenesis
R Fleischmajer, B R Olsen, R Timpl, J S Perlish, O Lovelace
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jun 1983, 80 (11) 3354-3358; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.80.11.3354

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Collagen fibril formation during embryogenesis
R Fleischmajer, B R Olsen, R Timpl, J S Perlish, O Lovelace
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jun 1983, 80 (11) 3354-3358; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.80.11.3354
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: 116 (49)
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