The Influence of Simple Phenols on Collagen Type I Fibrillogenesis in vitro


Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription Access

Abstract

The influence of phenolic compounds with different numbers of hydroxy groups (phenol, pyrocatechol, resorcinol, and pyrogallol) on the kinetics of in vitro fibrillogenesis of collagen and on fibril structure has been studied. It has been shown that these phenols accelerate fibril formation mainly by shortening the lag phase, presumably facilitating the formation of collagen dimers and their subsequent association to linear aggregates. The accelerating activity of phenols is proportional to the number of hydroxy groups in the molecule. It increases in the series: phenol < resorcinol < pyrogallol. Therefore, the ability of phenols to accelerate fibril formation is likely to stem from the formation of hydrogen bonds with amino-acid residues in collagen chains. The hydrogen bonds may stabilize the structure of the intermediates, facilitating their interaction during fibrillogenesis.

About the authors

Yu. A. Kim

Institute of Cell Biophysics

Author for correspondence.
Email: yuk01@rambler.ru
Russian Federation, Pushchino, Moscow oblast, 142290

S. G. Gaidin

Institute of Cell Biophysics

Email: yuk01@rambler.ru
Russian Federation, Pushchino, Moscow oblast, 142290

Yu. S. Tarahovsky

Institute of Theoretical and Experimental Biophysics

Email: yuk01@rambler.ru
Russian Federation, Moscow oblast, 142290

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Copyright (c) 2018 Pleiades Publishing, Inc.