Literature DB >> 1994036

Three-dimensional spatial relationship between the collagen fibrils and the inorganic calcium phosphate crystals of pickerel (Americanus americanus) and herring (Clupea harengus) bone.

D D Lee1, M J Glimcher.   

Abstract

High-voltage (1.0 MV) electron microscopy and stereomicroscopy, electron probe microanalysis, electron diffraction and three-dimensional computer reconstruction, have been used to examine the spatial relationship between the inorganic crystals of calcium phosphate and the collagen fibrils of pickerel and herring bone. High-voltage stereo electron-micrographs were obtained of cross-sections of the cylinder-shaped intramuscular bones in uncalcified regions, in regions where only one or only several crystals had been deposited in some of the fibrils, and in successive sections containing progressively more mineral crystals until the stage of full mineralization was reached. High-resolution electron probe microanalysis confirmed that the electron-dense particles contained calcium and phosphorus. In the earliest stages of mineralization and progressing throughout the mineralization process, the crystals are located only within the collagen fibrils; crystals are not observed free in the extracellular spaces between collagen fibrils. The progressive increase in the mass of mineral deposited in the bone tissue with time occurs, essentially, completely within the collagen fibrils including the stage of full mineralization. At this stage, cross-sectional profiles of collagen fibrils are completely obliterated by mineral. A small number of crystals that are located on or close to the surface of the fibrils appear to extend a very short distance into the spaces between the fibrils. These ultrastructural observations of the very onset of calcification in which nucleation of the calcium phosphate crystals is clearly shown to begin within specific volumes of collagen fibrils, and of the subsequent temporal and spatial sequences of this phenomenon, which shows that calcification continues wholly within the collagen fibrils until maximum calcification is achieved, add important information on the basic physical chemical mechanism of the calcification and the structural elements that are involved. The spatial and temporal independence of the sites where mineralization is initiated establishes that such ultrastructural locations within individual collagen fibrils represent independent, physical chemical nucleation loci. The findings are totally inconsistent with the proposal that crystals must first be deposited in matrix vesicles, or other components such as mitochondria, and subsequently released and propagated in the interfibrillar space, until they eventually reach and impregnate the hole zone regions of the collagen fibrils. Three-dimensional computer reconstruction of serial transverse and longitudinal sections demonstrates periodic swellings along the collagen fibrils, corresponding to the hole zone region of their axial period as mineralization proceeds.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1994036     DOI: 10.1016/0022-2836(91)90752-r

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  19 in total

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