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Force-bearing tissues such as blood vessels, lungs, and ligaments depend on the properties of elasticity and flexibility. The 10 to 12 nm diameter fibrillin microfibrils play vital roles in maintaining the structural integrity of these highly dynamic tissues and in regulating extracellular growth factors. In humans, defective microfibril function results in several diseases affecting the skin, cardiovascular, skeletal, and ocular systems. Despite the discovery of fibrillin-1 having occurred more than two decades ago, the structure and organization of fibrillin monomers within the microfibrils are still controversial. Recent structural data have revealed strategies by which fibrillin is able to maintain its architecture in dynamic tissues without compromising its ability to interact with itself and other cell matrix components. This review summarizes our current knowledge of microfibril structure, from individual fibrillin domains and the calcium-dependent tuning of pairwise interdomain interactions to microfibril dynamics, and how this relates to microfibril function in health and disease.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.str.2011.12.008

Type

Journal article

Journal

Structure

Publication Date

08/02/2012

Volume

20

Pages

215 - 225

Keywords

Amino Acid Motifs, Animals, Calcium, Elasticity, Fibrillin-1, Fibrillins, Humans, Microfibrils, Microfilament Proteins, Models, Molecular, Mutation, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Quaternary, Protein Structure, Tertiary