Sheep's wool: Difference between revisions

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Wool has a cuticle layer that is only one cell thick, while human hair, for example, has a cuticle layer up to 10 cells thick. Wool cuticle cells also have a wedge-shaped shaped cross-section as opposed to rectangular, so the exposed edge height of wool cuticle cells is about 1 um as opposed to < 0.5 um in other animal fibers.<ref name="wortmann">Wortmann, F.-J. (2009). <i>The structure and properties of wool and hair fibres. Handbook of Textile Fibre Structure,</i> 108–145. doi:10.1533/9781845697310.1.108 </ref>  
Wool has a cuticle layer that is only one cell thick, while human hair, for example, has a cuticle layer up to 10 cells thick. Wool cuticle cells also have a wedge-shaped shaped cross-section as opposed to rectangular, so the exposed edge height of wool cuticle cells is about 1 um as opposed to < 0.5 um in other animal fibers.<ref name="wortmann">Wortmann, F.-J. (2009). <i>The structure and properties of wool and hair fibres. Handbook of Textile Fibre Structure,</i> 108–145. doi:10.1533/9781845697310.1.108 </ref>  
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Wool cortexes typically have a well defined well defined bilateral segmentation of para-cortical and ortho-cortical cells. Because of this, wool’s crimp has been attributed to its cortex structure.<ref name="wortmann"></ref><ref name="marshall">Marshall RC, Orwin DF, Gillespie JM. Structure and biochemistry of mammalian hard keratin. <i>Electron Microsc Rev.</i> 1991;4(1):47-83. doi:10.1016/0892-0354(91)90016-6</ref>  However, further research has disproved the association between para and ortho-cuticle cell distribution. <ref>Hynd PI, Edwards NM, Hebart M, McDowall M, Clark S. Wool fibre crimp is determined by mitotic asymmetry and position of final keratinisation and not ortho- and para-cortical cell segmentation. Animal. 2009;3(6):838-843. doi:10.1017/S1751731109003966</ref><ref>Harland DP, Vernon JA, Woods JL, et al. Intrinsic curvature in wool fibres is determined by the relative length of orthocortical and paracortical cells. J Exp Biol. 2018;221(Pt 6):jeb172312. Published 2018 Mar 22. doi:10.1242/jeb.172312
Wool cortexes typically have a well defined well defined bilateral segmentation of para-cortical and ortho-cortical cells. Because of this, wool’s crimp has been attributed to its cortex structure.<ref name="wortmann"></ref><ref name="marshall">Marshall RC, Orwin DF, Gillespie JM. Structure and biochemistry of mammalian hard keratin. <i>Electron Microsc Rev.</i> 1991;4(1):47-83. doi:10.1016/0892-0354(91)90016-6</ref>  However, further research has disproved the association between para and ortho-cuticle cell distribution. <ref>Hynd PI, Edwards NM, Hebart M, McDowall M, Clark S. Wool fibre crimp is determined by mitotic asymmetry and position of final keratinisation and not ortho- and para-cortical cell segmentation. Animal. 2009;3(6):838-843. doi:10.1017/S1751731109003966</ref><ref name="harland">Harland DP, Vernon JA, Woods JL, et al. Intrinsic curvature in wool fibres is determined by the relative length of orthocortical and paracortical cells. J Exp Biol. 2018;221(Pt 6):jeb172312. Published 2018 Mar 22. doi:10.1242/jeb.172312
</ref> Crimp is actually caused by the differences in length between para- and otho-cuticle cells.<ref>Harland DP, Vernon JA, Woods JL, et al. Intrinsic curvature in wool fibres is determined by the relative length of orthocortical and paracortical cells. J Exp Biol. 2018;221(Pt 6):jeb172312. Published 2018 Mar 22. doi:10.1242/jeb.172312
</ref> Crimp is actually caused by the differences in length between para- and otho-cuticle cells.<ref name="harland">
</ref>


==Microbial interactions with wool==
==Microbial interactions with wool==

Revision as of 02:22, 11 December 2024

Introduction

Figure 1. A lamb displaying a woolly coat. By Jakub Halun
Figure 2. A lamb displaying a hairy coat. By H. Zell

Sheep (Ovis aries) have been selectively bred to continuously produce single coated wool fleece rather than coats composed of an outer hair layer and an inner wool layer.[1] True wool, as opposed to hair, is characterised by its high follicle density in the skin, small diameter, and high crimp [2]
The single woolly coat is recessive trait caused by the insertion of an antisense EIF2S2 retrogene[3] into the 3′ untranslated region of the IRF2BP2 gene.[4] This gene mutation creates a chimeric IRF2BP2/asEIF2S2 RNA transcript that targets the genuine sense EIF2S2 mRNA and creates EIF2S2 dsRNA that regulates the production of EIF2S2 protein [4]. The difference is visible in lamb's wool, where a woolly lamb has visible curls and a hairy lamb has of a wave pattern.

Wool structure

All hair and wool fibers are composed of an cuticle layer of overlapping cells wrapped around a cortex. Coarse wools and many animal fibers also contain a medulla consisting of empty vacuoles.
Wool has a cuticle layer that is only one cell thick, while human hair, for example, has a cuticle layer up to 10 cells thick. Wool cuticle cells also have a wedge-shaped shaped cross-section as opposed to rectangular, so the exposed edge height of wool cuticle cells is about 1 um as opposed to < 0.5 um in other animal fibers.[5]
Wool cortexes typically have a well defined well defined bilateral segmentation of para-cortical and ortho-cortical cells. Because of this, wool’s crimp has been attributed to its cortex structure.[5][6] However, further research has disproved the association between para and ortho-cuticle cell distribution. [7][8] Crimp is actually caused by the differences in length between para- and otho-cuticle cells.<ref name="harland">

Microbial interactions with wool

References

  1. Ryder M. A survey of European primitive breeds of sheep. Ann Genet Sel Anim. 1981;13(4):381-418. doi:10.1186/1297-9686-13-4-38
  2. Doyle EK, Preston JWV, McGregor BA, Hynd PI. The science behind the wool industry. The importance and value of wool production from sheep. Anim Front. 2021;11(2):15-23. Published 2021 May 17. doi:10.1093/af/vfab005
  3. Staszak K, Makałowska I. Cancer, Retrogenes, and Evolution. Life (Basel). 2021;11(1):72. Published 2021 Jan 19. doi:10.3390/life11010072
  4. 4.0 4.1 Demars J, Cano M, Drouilhet L, et al. Genome-Wide Identification of the Mutation Underlying Fleece Variation and Discriminating Ancestral Hairy Species from Modern Woolly Sheep. Mol Biol Evol. 2017;34(7):1722-1729. doi:10.1093/molbev/msx114
  5. 5.0 5.1 Wortmann, F.-J. (2009). The structure and properties of wool and hair fibres. Handbook of Textile Fibre Structure, 108–145. doi:10.1533/9781845697310.1.108
  6. Marshall RC, Orwin DF, Gillespie JM. Structure and biochemistry of mammalian hard keratin. Electron Microsc Rev. 1991;4(1):47-83. doi:10.1016/0892-0354(91)90016-6
  7. Hynd PI, Edwards NM, Hebart M, McDowall M, Clark S. Wool fibre crimp is determined by mitotic asymmetry and position of final keratinisation and not ortho- and para-cortical cell segmentation. Animal. 2009;3(6):838-843. doi:10.1017/S1751731109003966
  8. Harland DP, Vernon JA, Woods JL, et al. Intrinsic curvature in wool fibres is determined by the relative length of orthocortical and paracortical cells. J Exp Biol. 2018;221(Pt 6):jeb172312. Published 2018 Mar 22. doi:10.1242/jeb.172312



Edited by Isaac Yu, student of Joan Slonczewski for BIOL 116, 2024, Kenyon College.