Fibrillin-rich microfibrils are evolutionarily ancient macromolecular assemblies of the extracellular matrix. They have unique
extensible properties that endow vascular and other tissues with long-range elasticity. Microfibril extensibility supports
the low pressure closed circulations of lower organisms such as crustaceans. In higher vertebrates, microfibrils act as a
template for elastin deposition and are components of mature elastic fibres. In man, the importance of microfibrils is highlighted
by the linkage of mutations in their principal structural component, fibrillin-1, to the heritable disease Marfan syndrome
which is characterised by severe cardiovascular, skeletal and ocular defects. When isolated from tissues, fibrillin-rich microfibrils
have a complex ultrastructural organisation with a characteristic ‘beads-on-a-strong’ appearance. X-ray fibre diffraction
studies and biomechanical testing have shown that microfibrils are reversibly extensible at tissue extensions of 100%. Ultrastructural
analysis and 3D reconstructions of isolated microfibrils using automated electron tomography have revealed new details of
how fibrillin molecules are aligned within microfibrils in untensioned and extended states, and delineated the role of calcium
in regulating microfibril beaded periodicity, rest length and molecular organisation. The molecular basis of how fibrillin
molecules assemble into microfibrils, the central role of cells in regulating this process, and the identity of other molecules
that may coassemble into microfibrils are now being elucidated. This information will enhance our understanding of the elastic
mechanism of these unique extracellular matrix polymers, and may lead to new microfibril-based strategies for repairing elastic
tissues in ageing and disease.
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.