Structural investigation of loose connective tissue by using a series of dextran fractions as non-interacting macromolecular probes
- 1 February 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 161 (2) , 285-291
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1610285
Abstract
The ability of the uncharged open-coil dextran molecules to penetrate tissue space, without coil-shape change, was utilized to probe (by partitioning experiments) the structural arrangement of the collagen-fibre network and the proteoglycan system. Hyaluronidase digests most of the proteoglycans away and enables the respective contributions to the exclusion volume to be evaluated by using a series of different-molecular-weight dextrans. It appears that the major part of the exclusion volume is due to the collagen-fibril as a rod and the dextran coil as an impenetrable sphere. The additional exclusion due to the proteoglycans could be accounted for by a set of points (regions of high proteoglycan-segment density) over which the dextran coild cannot pass. These points are an average of 50 nm apart and are indicative of local extensive entanglement of high-molecular-weight proteoglycans with each other. Reasons are given why these entanglements could not act as cross-links in long-term elastic loading of the tissue.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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