| Literature DB >> 22462769 |
Lee G Gonzalez1, Jennifer Hiller, Nick J Terrill, Joanna Parkinson, Kate Thomas, Tim J Wess.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Isopropanol is widely used by conservators to relax the creases and folds of parchment artefacts. At present, little is known of the possible side effects of the chemical on parchments main structural component- collagen. This study uses X-ray Diffraction to investigate the effects of a range of isopropanol concentrations on the dimensions of the nanostructure of the collagen component of new parchment.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22462769 PMCID: PMC3359168 DOI: 10.1186/1752-153X-6-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Cent J ISSN: 1752-153X Impact factor: 4.215
Figure 12D WAXD pattern and corresponding 1D linear trace.
Figure 22D SAXD pattern and corresponding 1D linear trace.
Structural information obtained from XRD patterns of collagen fibrils after IPA treatment and air-drying
| IPA % | Intermolecular lateral | axial D-periodicity nm (sd) | helical rise per residue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1.210 (+/- 0.007) | 62.6 (+/- 0.13) | 0.286 (+/- < 0.0006) |
| 10 | 1.211 (+/- 0.012) | 62.3 (+/- 0.00) | 0.282 (+/- 0.0008) |
| 20 | 1.211 (+/- 0.009) | 62.4 (+/- 0.14) | 0.282 (+/- < 0.0006) |
| 30 | 1.203 (+/- 0.003) | 62.3 (+/- 0.27) | 0.282 (+/- < 0.0009) |
| 40 | 1.200 (+/- < 0.008) | 62.4 (+/- 0.21) | 0.280 (+/- 0.0007) |
| 50 | 1.182 (+/- 0.007) | 62.5 (+/- 0.16) | 0.280 (+/- 0.0004) |
| 60 | 1.182 (+/- 0.006) | 62.1 (+/- 0.16) | 0.280 (+/- < 0.0008) |
| 70 | 1.169 (+/- 0.004) | 62.1 (+/- 0.13) | 0.279 (+/- < 0.0001) |
| 80 | 1.169 (+/- 0.005) | 61.3 (+/- 0.14) | 0.278 (+/- 0.0005) |
| 90 | 1.169 (+/- < 0.007) | 61.3 (+/- 0.06) | 0.278 (+/- 0.0007) |
| 100 | 1.148 (+/- 0.005) | 61.1 (+/- 0.14) | 0.277 (+/- < 0.0004) |
Structural information obtained from XRD patterns of collagen fibrils after IPA treatment, rehydration and air-drying
| IPA % | intermolecular lateral packing nm | axial D-periodicity nm | helical rise per residue nm |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1.212 (+/- 0.011) | 62.6 (+/- 0.03) | 0.286 (+/- 0.0007) |
| 10 | 1.197(+/- < 0.001) | 62.5 (+/- 0.06) | 0.286 (+/- 0.0003) |
| 20 | 1.203 (+/- 0.006) | 62.7(+/- 0.02) | 0.286 (+/- 0.0004) |
| 30 | 1.211 (+/- 0.004) | 62.8 (+/- 0.03) | 0.286 (+/- 0.0006) |
| 40 | 1.179 (+/- 0.004) | 62.6 (+/- 0.09) | 0.285 (+/- 0.0004) |
| 50 | 1.168 (+/- 0.004) | 62.6 (< 0.07) | 0.286 (+/- 0.0001) |
| 60 | 1.176 (+/- 0.002) | 62.5 (+/- 0.08) | 0.285 (+/- 0.0005) |
| 70 | 1.146 (+/- 0.002) | 63.7 (+/- 0.04) | 0.289 (+/- < 0.0001) |
| 80 | 1.149 (+/- 0.003) | 63.7 (< 0.01) | 0.289 (+/- 0.0009) |
| 90 | 1.151 (+/- 0.004) | 64.0 (+/- 0.05) | 0.289 (+/- 0.0004) |
| 100 | 1.132 (+/- 0.007) | 64.1 (+/- 0.03) | 0.290 (+/- 0.0002) |
Figure 3Schematic showing the structural changes observed within collagen fibrils with IPA treatment. A) Exposure of IPA to the collagen fibrils causes a loss of water from the collagen fibrils inducing a change in the intra and intermolecular bonding and a reduction in the structural dimensions of the fibril. B) After rehydration and air-drying of the collagen fibril the intermolecular distance between collagen does not return C) After rehydration and air-drying of the collagen fibril, samples treated with 70-100% IPA have collagen fibrils with greater axial D-periodicity and helical rise per residue and shorter intermolecular lateral packing.