Fibrillar structure and elasticity of hydrating collagen: A quantitative multiscale approach

It is well known that hydration of collagenous tissues leads to their swelling, as well as to softening of their elastic behavior. However, it is much less clear which microstructural and micromechanical “rules” are involved in this process. Here, we develop a theoretical approach cast in analytical...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of theoretical biology 2013-01, Vol.317 (21), p.384-393
Hauptverfasser: Morin, Claire, Hellmich, Christian, Henits, Peter
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Hellmich, Christian
Henits, Peter
description It is well known that hydration of collagenous tissues leads to their swelling, as well as to softening of their elastic behavior. However, it is much less clear which microstructural and micromechanical “rules” are involved in this process. Here, we develop a theoretical approach cast in analytical mathematical formulations, which is experimentally validated by a wealth of independent tests on collagenous tissues, such as X-ray diffraction, vacuum drying, mass measurements, and Brillouin light scattering. The overall emerging picture is the following: air-drying leaves water only in the gap zones between the triple-helical collagen molecules; upon re-hydration, the extrafibrillar space is established at volumes directly proportional to the hydration-induced swelling of the (micro) fibrils, until the maximum equatorial distance between the long collagen molecules is reached. Thereafter, the volume of the fibrils stays constant, and only the extrafibrillar volume continues to grow. At all these hydration stages, the elastic behavior is governed by the same, hydration-invariant mechanical interaction pattern of only two, interpenetrating mechanical phases: transversely isotropic molecular collagen and isotropic water (or empty pores in the vacuum-dried case). ► General rules for hydration-induced collagen swelling and softening are identified. ► Fibrillar volume swelling is quantified from X-ray diffraction data. ► Fibrillar elasticity is quantified from Brillouin light scattering. ► Extrafibrillar space grows proportional to fibril swelling. ► Transversely isotropic elasticity of molecular collagen is hydration-independent.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jtbi.2012.09.026
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subjects air drying
Animals
Biomechanical Phenomena
Brillouin light scattering
collagen
Elastic Modulus
Elasticity
Extrafibrillar space
Fibrillar Collagens - chemistry
leaves
light scattering
Macropodidae
Models, Biological
Molecular collagen
Rats
Shear Strength
Swelling
vacuum drying
Water - chemistry
X-ray diffraction
X-ray diffraction spacing
title Fibrillar structure and elasticity of hydrating collagen: A quantitative multiscale approach
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