Cortical cell types and intermediate filament arrangements correlate with fiber curvature in Japanese human hair

Naturally straight and curved human scalp hairs were examined using fluorescence and electron microscopy techniques to determine morphological and ultrastructural features contributing to single fiber curvature. The study excluded cuticle and medulla, which lack known bilateral structural asymmetry...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of structural biology 2009-04, Vol.166 (1), p.46-58
Hauptverfasser: Bryson, Warren G., Harland, Duane P., Caldwell, Jonathan P., Vernon, James A., Walls, Richard J., Woods, Joy L., Nagase, Shinobu, Itou, Takashi, Koike, Kenzo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Naturally straight and curved human scalp hairs were examined using fluorescence and electron microscopy techniques to determine morphological and ultrastructural features contributing to single fiber curvature. The study excluded cuticle and medulla, which lack known bilateral structural asymmetry and therefore potential to form curved fibers. The cortex contained four classifiable cell types, two of which were always present in much greater abundance than the remaining two types. In straight hair, these cell types were arranged annularly and evenly within the cortex, implying that the averaging of differing structural features would maintain a straight fiber conformation. In curved fibers, the cell types were bilaterally distributed approximately perpendicular to fiber curvature direction with one dominant cell type predominantly located closest to the convex fiber side and the other, closest to the concave side. Electron tomography confirmed that the dominant cell type closest to the convex fiber side contained discrete macrofibrils composed of helically arranged intermediate filaments, while the dominant cell type closest to the concave side contained larger fused macrofibrils composed of intermediate filament arrangements varying from helical to hexagonal arrays approximately parallel to the longitudinal fiber axis. These findings concur with the current hypothesis of hair curvature formation and behavior.
ISSN:1047-8477
1095-8657
DOI:10.1016/j.jsb.2008.12.006