Waite J Herbert, Lichtenegger Helga C, Stucky Galen D, Hansma Paul
Department of Molecular Cell and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara 93106, USA.
Biochemistry. 2004 Jun 22;43(24):7653-62. doi: 10.1021/bi049380h.
Most organisms consist of a functionally adaptive assemblage of hard and soft tissues. Despite the obvious advantages of reinforcing soft protoplasm with a hard scaffold, such composites can lead to tremendous mechanical stresses where the two meet. Although little is known about how nature relieves these stresses, it is generally agreed that fundamental insights about molecular adaptation at hard/soft interfaces could profoundly influence how we think about biomaterials. Based on two noncellular tissues, mussel byssus and polychaete jaws, recent studies suggest that one natural strategy to minimize interfacial stresses between adjoining stiff and soft tissue appears to be the creation of a "fuzzy" boundary, which avoids abrupt changes in mechanical properties. Instead there is a gradual mechanical change that accompanies the transcendence from stiff to soft and vice versa. In byssal threads, the biochemical medium for achieving such a gradual mechanical change involves the elegant use of collagen-based self-assembling block copolymers. There are three distinct diblock copolymer types in which one block is always collagenous, whereas the other can be either elastin-like (soft), amorphous polyglycine (intermediate), or silk-like (stiff). Gradients of these are made by an incrementally titrated expression of the three proteins in secretory cells the titration phenotype of which is linked to their location. Thus, reflecting exactly the composition of each thread, the distal cells secrete primarily the silk- and polyglycine-collagen diblocks, whereas the proximal cells secrete the elastin- and polyglycine-collagen diblocks. Those cells in between exhibit gradations of collagens with silk or elastin blocks. Spontaneous self-assembly appears to be by pH triggered metal binding by histidine (HIS)-rich sequences at both the amino and carboxy termini of the diblocks. In the polychaete jaws, HIS-rich sequences are expanded into a major block domain. Histidine predominates at over 20 mol % near the distal tip and diminishes to about 5 mol % near the proximal base. The abundance of histidine is directly correlated to transition metal content (Zn or Cu) as well as hardness determined by nanoindentation. EXAFS analyses of the jaws indicate that transition metals such as Zn are directly bound to histidine ligands and may serve as cross-linkers.
大多数生物体由功能适应性的硬组织和软组织组合而成。尽管用硬支架加固软质原生质有明显优势,但这种复合材料在两者交界处会产生巨大的机械应力。虽然对于自然如何缓解这些应力知之甚少,但人们普遍认为,关于硬/软界面分子适应性的基本见解可能会深刻影响我们对生物材料的看法。基于贻贝足丝和多毛类动物颚这两种非细胞组织,最近的研究表明,一种使相邻硬组织和软组织之间的界面应力最小化的自然策略似乎是创建一个“模糊”边界,避免机械性能的突然变化。相反,从硬到软或反之的转变伴随着机械性能的逐渐变化。在足丝中,实现这种逐渐机械变化的生化介质涉及巧妙地使用基于胶原蛋白的自组装嵌段共聚物。有三种不同的二嵌段共聚物类型,其中一个嵌段总是胶原质的,而另一个可以是类弹性蛋白(软)、无定形聚甘氨酸(中间)或类丝(硬)。这些的梯度是通过分泌细胞中三种蛋白质的逐步滴定表达形成的,其滴定表型与它们的位置相关。因此,精确反映每根丝的组成,远端细胞主要分泌丝 - 聚甘氨酸 - 胶原蛋白二嵌段,而近端细胞分泌弹性蛋白 - 聚甘氨酸 - 胶原蛋白二嵌段。两者之间的那些细胞表现出带有丝或弹性蛋白嵌段的胶原蛋白梯度。自发自组装似乎是由二嵌段氨基和羧基末端富含组氨酸(HIS)的序列通过pH触发的金属结合引起的。在多毛类动物的颚中,富含组氨酸的序列扩展成一个主要的嵌段结构域。在靠近远端尖端处,组氨酸占比超过20摩尔%,而在靠近近端基部处减少到约5摩尔%。组氨酸的丰度与过渡金属含量(锌或铜)以及通过纳米压痕测定的硬度直接相关。对颚的扩展X射线吸收精细结构(EXAFS)分析表明,诸如锌之类的过渡金属直接与组氨酸配体结合,并可能充当交联剂。