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Biophysical Journal 70: 1966-1972 (1996)
© 1996 the Biophysical Society

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Proteoglycans contain a 4.6 A repeat in muscular dystrophy corneas: x-ray diffraction evidence.

A J Quantock, G K Klintworth, D J Schanzlin, M S Capel, M E Lenz and E J Thonar

Anheuser-Busch Eye Institute, Department of Ophthalmology, St. Louis University School of Medicine, Missouri 63104, USA. quantoaj@sluvca.slu.edu

ABSTRACT

Synchrotron x-ray diffraction patterns from macular corneal dystrophy (MCD) corneas contain an unusual reflection that arises because of an undefined ultrastructure with a periodic repeat in the region of 4.6 A. In this study, we compared with wide-angle x-ray diffraction patterns obtained from four normal human corneas and four MCD corneas. Moreover, portions of two of the MCD corneas were pretreated with a specific glycosidase to shed light on the origin of the 4.6 A reflection. None of the normal corneas produced an x-ray reflection in the region of 4.6 A, whereas all four of the MCD corneas did (MCD type I at 4.65 A and 4.63 A, MCD type II at 4.63 A and 4.67 A). This reflection was diminished after incubation of the MCD tissues with either chondroitinase ABC or N-glycanase. The findings indicate that glycosaminoglycans or proteoglycans contribute to the unusual MCD x-ray reflection and hence most likely contain a periodic 4.6 A ultrastructure. Furthermore, the results imply that periodic 4.6 A MCD ultrastructures reside in either intact, unsulfated lumican molecules and regions of the CS/DS-containing molecules or in a region of a hybrid macromolecular aggregate formed by the interaction of the two molecules.




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S. Ying, A. Shiraishi, C. W.-C. Kao, R. L. Converse, J. L. Funderburgh, J. Swiergiel, M. R Roth, G. W. Conrad, and W. W.-Y. Kao
Characterization and Expression of the Mouse Lumican Gene
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Copyright © 1996 by the Biophysical Society.