Interfibrillar packing of bovine cornea by table-top and synchrotron scanning SAXS microscopy

J Appl Crystallogr. 2016 Jul 14;49(Pt 4):1231-1239. doi: 10.1107/S1600576716010396. eCollection 2016 Aug 1.

Abstract

Bovine cornea was studied with scanning small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) microscopy, by using both synchrotron radiation and a microfocus laboratory source. A combination of statistical (adaptive binning and canonical correlation analysis) and crystallographic (pair distribution function analysis) approaches allowed inspection of the collagen lateral packing of the supramolecular structure. Results reveal (i) a decrease of the interfibrillar distance and of the shell thickness around the fibrils from the periphery to the center of the cornea, (ii) a uniform fibril diameter across the explored area, and (iii) a distorted quasi-hexagonal arrangement of the collagen fibrils. The results are in agreement with existing literature. The overlap between laboratory and synchrotron-radiation data opens new perspectives for further studies on collagen-based/engineered tissues by the SAXS microscopy technique at laboratory-scale facilities.

Keywords: bovine cornea; scanning SAXS microscopy; small-angle X-ray scattering.