Nanoscale Structural Comparison of Fibrillin-1 Microfibrils Isolated from Marfan and Non-Marfan Syndrome Human Aorta

Șulea, Cristina M. ✉ [Sulea, Cristina Maria (Szív- és érbetegs...), author] Departmnet of Biophysics and Radiation Biology (SU / FM / I); Cardiovascular Center (SU / FM / C); Mártonfalvi, Zsolt [Mártonfalvi, Zsolt (Biofizika), author] Departmnet of Biophysics and Radiation Biology (SU / FM / I); Csányi, Csilla [Csányi, Mária Csilla (Trombózis hemoszt...), author] Departmnet of Biophysics and Radiation Biology (SU / FM / I); Haluszka, Dóra [Haluszka, Dóra (mikroszkópia, kis...), author] Departmnet of Biophysics and Radiation Biology (SU / FM / I); Pólos, Miklós [Pólos, Miklós (Orvostudományok), author] Cardiovascular Center (SU / FM / C); Ágg, Bence [Ágg, Bence (Farmakológia), author] Department of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapy (SU / FM / I); Cardiovascular Center (SU / FM / C); Stengl, Roland [Stengl, Roland (Szív és érbetegségek), author] Cardiovascular Center (SU / FM / C); Benke, Kálmán [Benke, Kálmán (Szívsebészet), author] Cardiovascular Center (SU / FM / C); Szabolcs, Zoltán** [Szabolcs, Zoltán (Szívsebészet), author] Cardiovascular Center (SU / FM / C); Kellermayer, Miklós S. Z. ✉ [Kellermayer, Miklós (Biofizika), author] Departmnet of Biophysics and Radiation Biology (SU / FM / I)

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES 1661-6596 1422-0067 24 (8) Paper: 7561 , 13 p. 2023
  • SJR Scopus - Inorganic Chemistry: D1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • (K135360)
  • (TKP2021-EGA-23) Funder: Ministry for Innovation and Technology
  • (ÚNKP-22-3-I-SE-49)
  • Nemzeti Kardiovaszkuláris Laboratórium(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00003) Funder: NRDIO
Subjects:
  • Cardiovascular system
Fibrillin-1 microfibrils are essential elements of the extracellular matrix serving as a scaffold for the deposition of elastin and endowing connective tissues with tensile strength and elasticity. Mutations in the fibrillin-1 gene (FBN1) are linked to Marfan syndrome (MFS), a systemic connective tissue disorder that, besides other heterogeneous symptoms, usually manifests in life-threatening aortic complications. The aortic involvement may be explained by a dysregulation of microfibrillar function and, conceivably, alterations in the microfibrils’ supramolecular structure. Here, we present a nanoscale structural characterization of fibrillin-1 microfibrils isolated from two human aortic samples with different FBN1 gene mutations by using atomic force microscopy, and their comparison with microfibrillar assemblies purified from four non-MFS human aortic samples. Fibrillin-1 microfibrils displayed a characteristic “beads-on-a-string” appearance. The microfibrillar assemblies were investigated for bead geometry (height, length, and width), interbead region height, and periodicity. MFS fibrillin-1 microfibrils had a slightly higher mean bead height, but the bead length and width, as well as the interbead height, were significantly smaller in the MFS group. The mean periodicity varied around 50–52 nm among samples. The data suggest an overall thinner and presumably more frail structure for the MFS fibrillin-1 microfibrils, which may play a role in the development of MFS-related aortic symptomatology.
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2025-04-11 08:06