Collagen fibrillogenesis: fibronectin, integrins, and minor collagens as organizers and nucleators
University of Manchester · Wellcome Centre for Cell-Matrix Research
Abstract
Collagens are triple helical proteins that occur in the extracellular matrix (ECM) and at the cell-ECM interface. There are more than 30 collagens and collagen-related proteins but the most abundant are collagens I and II that exist as D-periodic (where D = 67 nm) fibrils. The fibrils are of broad biomedical importance and have central roles in embryogenesis, arthritis, tissue repair, fibrosis, tumor invasion, and cardiovascular disease. Collagens I and II spontaneously form fibrils in vitro, which shows that collagen fibrillogenesis is a selfassembly process. However, the situation in vivo is not that simple; collagen I-containing fibrils do not form in the absence of fibronectin, fibronectin-binding and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.36
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 69
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Fibrillogenesis
- Fibronectin
- Fibril
- Integrin
- Extracellular matrix
- Collagen, type I, alpha 1
- Collagen receptor
- Cell biology
- Good health and well-being