Carboxymethylation of the fibrillar collagen with respect to formation of hydroxyapatite
✍ Scribed by Hermann Ehrlich; Thomas Hanke; Paul Simon; René Born; Christiane Fischer; Andrej Frolov; Tobias Langrock; Ralf Hoffmann; Uwe Schwarzenbolz; Thomas Henle; Vasily V. Bazhenov; Hartmut Worch
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 413 KB
- Volume
- 9999B
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1552-4973
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Control over crystal growth by acidic matrix macromolecules is an important process in the formation of many mineralized tissues. Highly acidic macromolecules are postulated intermediates in tissue mineralization, because they sequester many calcium ions and occur in high concentrations at mineralizing foci in distantly related organisms. A prerequisite for biomineralization is the ability of cations like calcium to bind to proteins and to result in concert with appropriate anions like phosphates or carbonates in composite materials with bone‐like properties. For this mineralization process the proteins have to be modified with respect to acidification. In this study we modified the protein collagen by carboxymethylation using glucuronic acid. Our experiments showed unambigously, that N^ε^‐carboxymethyllysine is the major product of the in vitro nonenzymatic glycation reaction between glucuronic acid and collagen. We hypothesized that the function of biomimetically carboxymethylated collagen is to increase the local concentration of corresponding ions so that a critical nucleus of ions can be formed, leading to the formation of the mineral. Thus, the self‐organization of HAP nanocrystals on and within collagen fibrils was intensified by carboxymethylation. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater, 2010
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Skeletal tissues adapt to their mechanical environments by modulating gene expression, cell metabolism, and extracellular matrix (ECM) architecture; however, the mechanosensory mechanisms for these processes are incompletely understood. Primary cilia have emerged as critical components
Given a polynomial solution of a differential equation, its m-ary decomposition, i.e. its decomposition as a sum of m polynomials P [j] (x) = k α j,k x λ j,k containing only exponents λ j,k with λ j,k+1 -λ j,k = m, is considered. A general algorithm is proposed in order to build holonomic equations