Collagen quantification in tissue specimens

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Abstract

Collagen is the major extracellular protein in mammals. Accurate quantification of collagen is essential in the biomaterials (e.g., reproducible collagen scaffold fabrication), drug discovery (e.g., assessment of collagen in pathophysiologies, such as fibrosis), and tissue engineering (e.g., quantification of cell-synthesized collagen) fields. Although measuring hydroxyproline content is the most widely used method to quantify collagen in biological specimens, the process is very laborious. To this end, the Sircol™ Collagen Assay is widely used due to its inherent simplicity and convenience. However, this method leads to overestimation of collagen content due to the interaction of Sirius red with basic amino acids of non-collagenous proteins. Herein, we describe the addition of an ultrafiltration purification step in the process to accurately determine collagen content in tissues.

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Coentro, J. Q., Capella-Monsonís, H., Graceffa, V., Wu, Z., Mullen, A. M., Raghunath, M., & Zeugolis, D. I. (2017). Collagen quantification in tissue specimens. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1627, pp. 341–350). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7113-8_22

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