Food Biochemistry and Food Processing (2 edition)

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BLBS102-c20 BLBS102-Simpson March 21, 2012 13:35 Trim: 276mm X 219mm Printer Name: Yet to Come


366 Part 3: Meat, Poultry and Seafoods

(C)

(A)
-Gly-X-Y-Gly-Pro-Hyp-Gly-X-Hyp-Gly-Pro-Y-

Intermolecular (D)
cross-links

Telopeptides

α-chain (B)

N-terminal C-terminal

Figure 20.1.Arrangement of collagen fibril in collagen fiber. (A) Amino acid sequence of a collagen polypeptide. (B) Collagen polypeptide.
(C) Tropocollagen. (D) Collagen fibril.

COLLAGEN COMPOSITION AND
STRUCTURE

Collagen is typically used as a generic term to cover a large fam-
ily of distinct proteins, each with specific structures, functions,
and tissue distributions in the extracellular matrix (Ramshaw
et al. 2009). The collagen monomer is a long cylindrical protein
about 2800 Å long and 14–15 Å in diameter (Foegeding et al.
1996). Collagen is constructed from tropocollagen, a rod-shaped
protein consisting of three polypeptides unit (calledα-chains)
intertwined to form a triple-helical structure. Eachα-chain coils
in a left-handed helix with three residues per turn, and the three
chains are twisted right-handed to form the triple helix (Wong
1989) (Fig. 20.1). The three chains are held together primarily
by hydrogen bonding between adjacent –CO and –NH group

(Wong 1989, Lee et al. 2001). At least 19 types of collagen des-
ignated types I–XIX have been reported (Bailey et al. 1998, Lee
et al. 2001, Woo et al. 2008). Differentα-chains, designatedα1,
α2, orα3, within the same type of collagen differ in their amino
acid composition. The distribution ofα1-,α2-, andα3-chains
in collagen molecules varies depending on the specific genetic
variants (Xiong 1997). The most common collagen is type I col-
lagen. It contains twoα1(I)-chains and oneα2(I)-chain, which
has different amino acid sequence and composition. Each chain
has a molecular mass about 100,000Da, yielding a total molecu-
lar mass of about 300,000 Da of collagen (Foegeding et al. 1996).
Type I collagen is the major of epimysium. Both types I and III
are present in the perimysium in large amounts, whereas types
II, IV, and V are primary species in epimysium (Table 20.1)
(Xiong 1997). Types I, II, and III collagen as well as types V

Table 20.1.Collagens and Their Distribution

Type Peptide Chainsa Molecular Composition Occurrence

I α1,α2[α1(I)] 2 α2(I) Skin, tendon, bone, muscle (epimysium)
II α1[α1(II)] 3 Intervertebral disc, cartilage
III α1[α1(III)] 3 Fetal skin, cardiovascular vessel, uterus, synovial membranes,
inner organ, muscle (perimysium)
IV α1,α2[α1(IV)] 3 (?)b Basement membrane, kidney glomeruli, lens capsule, glomeruli
V AA,αB,αC (?) [αB] 2 αAor(αB) 3 +
(αA) 3 or (αC) 3 (?)

Placental membrane, cardiovascular system, lung, muscle
(endomysium)

Sources: Wong (1989) and Belitz et al. (2004).
aSince theα-chains of various types of collagen differ, the are calledα1(I),α1(II),αA, etc.
b(?) Not completely elucidated.
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