Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices

This report described the work carried out in 2007 using the equipment purchased from the supplementary equipment purchase (SEP) grant RG123/06. The aim of this work is to investigate the mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan (PG) gel interface in extra-cellular matri...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Goh, Kheng Lim.
Other Authors: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Format: Research Report
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/42247
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-42247
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-422472023-03-03T15:30:27Z Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices Goh, Kheng Lim. School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Chemical engineering This report described the work carried out in 2007 using the equipment purchased from the supplementary equipment purchase (SEP) grant RG123/06. The aim of this work is to investigate the mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan (PG) gel interface in extra-cellular matrices. To carry out this work, we have designed an experiment to investigate how freezing of soft tissues will alter the extra-cellular structure of the tissue and how this could implicate the mechanisms of stress transfer from the hydrated PG-rich gel to the fibrils. Freezing of biological tissues leads to the formation of ice crystallites. These crystallites disrupt cells, increase the electrolytic concentration around proteoglycans (PG) in the extra-cellular matrix (ECM), which comprises collagen fibrils embedded in and reinforcing a PG-rich gel, and consequently alter the organisation of the ECM. Here, we analyse the influence of freezing temperature (T) on the tensile properties of tendons and the underlying mechanisms of failure resulting from changes in the ECM structure. Fresh (unfrozen) and thawed samples of tail tendons (from a C57BL6 mouse) preserved at –20 oC and –80 oC were subjected to an axial-tensile load to rupture. The maximum stress (σ), stiffness (E), strain at the maximum stress (ε), strain energy density to the maximum stress (u) of tendons, critical strain (εc) at the elastic limit, the corresponding stress (σc) and elastic strain energy density (uc), and strain energy density during fibril pull-out and PG gel rupture (up), were determined. Freezing at –20 oC revealed no significant effect on the mechanical properties. However, apart from ε, σc, uc and up, freezing at –80 oC demonstrated significantly higher σ, E and u and lower εc. Analysis of these results implicates two key factors influencing the mechanical properties. These are: (1) the long-range order of radial (i.e. side-to-side) packing of collagen molecules in fibrils, the mechanics of fibril-fibril sliding during the elastic loading stage, and (2) the underlying (van Der Waals forces of) interactions between the glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), associated with collagen-bound PGs,from adjacent fibrils. However, the toughening mechanism resulting in fibril pull-out and PG gel rupture is not affected by freezing. RG123/06 2010-10-05T08:15:38Z 2010-10-05T08:15:38Z 2010 2010 Research Report http://hdl.handle.net/10356/42247 en 26 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Chemical engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Chemical engineering
Goh, Kheng Lim.
Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices
description This report described the work carried out in 2007 using the equipment purchased from the supplementary equipment purchase (SEP) grant RG123/06. The aim of this work is to investigate the mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan (PG) gel interface in extra-cellular matrices. To carry out this work, we have designed an experiment to investigate how freezing of soft tissues will alter the extra-cellular structure of the tissue and how this could implicate the mechanisms of stress transfer from the hydrated PG-rich gel to the fibrils. Freezing of biological tissues leads to the formation of ice crystallites. These crystallites disrupt cells, increase the electrolytic concentration around proteoglycans (PG) in the extra-cellular matrix (ECM), which comprises collagen fibrils embedded in and reinforcing a PG-rich gel, and consequently alter the organisation of the ECM. Here, we analyse the influence of freezing temperature (T) on the tensile properties of tendons and the underlying mechanisms of failure resulting from changes in the ECM structure. Fresh (unfrozen) and thawed samples of tail tendons (from a C57BL6 mouse) preserved at –20 oC and –80 oC were subjected to an axial-tensile load to rupture. The maximum stress (σ), stiffness (E), strain at the maximum stress (ε), strain energy density to the maximum stress (u) of tendons, critical strain (εc) at the elastic limit, the corresponding stress (σc) and elastic strain energy density (uc), and strain energy density during fibril pull-out and PG gel rupture (up), were determined. Freezing at –20 oC revealed no significant effect on the mechanical properties. However, apart from ε, σc, uc and up, freezing at –80 oC demonstrated significantly higher σ, E and u and lower εc. Analysis of these results implicates two key factors influencing the mechanical properties. These are: (1) the long-range order of radial (i.e. side-to-side) packing of collagen molecules in fibrils, the mechanics of fibril-fibril sliding during the elastic loading stage, and (2) the underlying (van Der Waals forces of) interactions between the glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), associated with collagen-bound PGs,from adjacent fibrils. However, the toughening mechanism resulting in fibril pull-out and PG gel rupture is not affected by freezing.
author2 School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
author_facet School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Goh, Kheng Lim.
format Research Report
author Goh, Kheng Lim.
author_sort Goh, Kheng Lim.
title Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices
title_short Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices
title_full Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices
title_fullStr Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices
title_full_unstemmed Mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices
title_sort mechanisms of stress transfer at the collagen fibril and proteoglycan gel interface in extra-cellular matrices
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/42247
_version_ 1759854405622956032