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Vol. 13, Issue 1, 382-391, January 2002
and
*Department of Chemical Engineering and
Most type I and II keratin genes are spatially and
temporally regulated in a pairwise manner in epithelial
tissues, where they represent the major structural proteins.
Epithelia can be partitioned into simple (single-layered)
and complex (multilayered) types. We compared the structural
and mechanical properties of natural keratin polymers
occurring in complex (K5-K14) and simple (K8-K18) epithelia.
The intrinsic properties of these distantly related keratin
filaments, whether dispersed or bundled in vitro, were
surprisingly similar in all respects when at high polymer concentration. When type I and II
assembly partners were switched to give rise to mismatched
polymers (K5-K18; K8-K14), the interfilament interactions,
which determine the structural and mechanical properties of
keratin polymers, were significantly altered. We also show that a K5-K16 polymer exhibits lesser elasticity than K5-
K14, which may help explain the inability of K16 to fully
rescue the skin blistering characteristic of K14 null mice.
The property of self-interaction exhibited by keratin
filaments is likely to assist their function in vivo and
may account for the relative paucity of cytoplasmic and
keratin-specific cross-linkers. Our findings underscore the
fundamental importance of pairwise polymerization and have
implications for the functional significance of keratin sequence diversity.
Department of Materials Science and
Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
Maryland 21218; and
Departments of Biological
Chemistry and Dermatology, The
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore,
Maryland 21205
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