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Liquid crystalline order in mucusMucus plays an exceptionally wide range of important biological roles. It operates as a protective, exchange, and transport medium in the digestive, respiratory, and reproductive systems of humans and other vertebrates. Mucus is a polymer hydrogel. It is secreted as discrete packages (secretory granules) by specialized secretory cells. Mucus hydrogel is stored in a condensed state inside the secretory granules. Depending upon the architecture of their constituent macromolecules and on the composition of the solvent, polymer gels can form liquid crystalline microstructures, with orientational order being exhibited over optically resolvable distances. Individual mucin molecules consist of alternating rigid segments (heavily glycosylated; hydrophilic) and flexible segments (nonglycosylated; hydrophobic). Polymer molecules consisting of rigid units linked by flexible spacers are frequently associated with liquid crystalline behavior, which again raises the possibility that mucus could form anisotropic fluid phases. Suggestions that mucins may be self-associating in dilute solution have previously been challenged on the basis of sedimentation-equilibrium studies performed on mucus in which potential sites of association were competitively blocked with inhibitors. However, the formation of stable liquid crystalline phases does not depend on the existence of inter- or intramolecular associations; these phases can form on the basis of steric considerations alone.
Document ID
20040090260
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
External Source(s)
Authors
Viney, C.
(University of Washington Seattle 98195)
Huber, A. E.
Verdugo, P.
Date Acquired
August 21, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: Macromolecules
Volume: 26
Issue: 4
ISSN: 0024-9297
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG9-604
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
NASA Discipline Number 40-20
Non-NASA Center
NASA Program Space Biology
NASA Discipline Cell Biology

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