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Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage

Biomechanical changes to the collagen fibrillar architecture in articular cartilage are believed to play a crucial role in enabling normal joint function. However, experimentally there is little quantitative knowledge about the structural response of the Type II collagen fibrils in cartilage to cycl...

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Autores principales: Inamdar, Sheetal R, Prévost, Sylvain, Terrill, Nicholas J, Knight, Martin M, Gupta, Himadri S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8631461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34563724
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2021.09.037
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author Inamdar, Sheetal R
Prévost, Sylvain
Terrill, Nicholas J
Knight, Martin M
Gupta, Himadri S
author_facet Inamdar, Sheetal R
Prévost, Sylvain
Terrill, Nicholas J
Knight, Martin M
Gupta, Himadri S
author_sort Inamdar, Sheetal R
collection PubMed
description Biomechanical changes to the collagen fibrillar architecture in articular cartilage are believed to play a crucial role in enabling normal joint function. However, experimentally there is little quantitative knowledge about the structural response of the Type II collagen fibrils in cartilage to cyclic loading in situ, and the mechanisms that drive the ability of cartilage to withstand long-term repetitive loading. Here we utilize synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) combined with in-situ cyclic loading of bovine articular cartilage explants to measure the fibrillar response in deep zone articular cartilage, in terms of orientation, fibrillar strain and inter-fibrillar variability in healthy cartilage and cartilage degraded by exposure to the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1β. We demonstrate that under repeated cyclic loading the fibrils reversibly change the width of the fibrillar orientation distribution whilst maintaining a largely consistent average direction of orientation. Specifically, the effect on the fibrillar network is a 3-dimensional conical orientation broadening around the normal to the joint surface, inferred by 3D reconstruction of X-ray scattering peak intensity distributions from the 2D pattern. Further, at the intrafibrillar level, this effect is coupled with reversible reduction in fibrillar pre-strain under compression, alongside increase in the variability of fibrillar pre-strain. In IL-1β degraded cartilage, the collagen rearrangement under cyclic loading is disrupted and associated with reduced tissue stiffness. These finding have implications as to how changes in local collagen nanomechanics might drive disease progression or vice versa in conditions such as osteoarthritis and provides a pathway to a mechanistic understanding of such diseases. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Structural deterioration in biomechanically loaded musculoskeletal organs, e.g., joint osteoarthritis and back pain, are linked to breakdown and changes in their collagen-rich cartilaginous tissue matrix. A critical component enabling cartilage biomechanics is the ultrastructural collagen fibrillar network in cartilage. However, experimental probes of the dynamic structural response of cartilage collagen to biomechanical loads are limited. Here, we use X-ray scattering during cyclic loading (as during walking) on joint tissue to show that cartilage fibrils resist loading by a reversible, three-dimensional orientation broadening and disordering mechanism at the molecular level, and that inflammation reduces this functionality. Our results will help understand how changes to small-scale tissue mechanisms are linked to ageing and osteoarthritic progression, and development of biomaterials for joint replacements.
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spelling pubmed-86314612021-12-06 Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage Inamdar, Sheetal R Prévost, Sylvain Terrill, Nicholas J Knight, Martin M Gupta, Himadri S Acta Biomater Full Length Article Biomechanical changes to the collagen fibrillar architecture in articular cartilage are believed to play a crucial role in enabling normal joint function. However, experimentally there is little quantitative knowledge about the structural response of the Type II collagen fibrils in cartilage to cyclic loading in situ, and the mechanisms that drive the ability of cartilage to withstand long-term repetitive loading. Here we utilize synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) combined with in-situ cyclic loading of bovine articular cartilage explants to measure the fibrillar response in deep zone articular cartilage, in terms of orientation, fibrillar strain and inter-fibrillar variability in healthy cartilage and cartilage degraded by exposure to the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1β. We demonstrate that under repeated cyclic loading the fibrils reversibly change the width of the fibrillar orientation distribution whilst maintaining a largely consistent average direction of orientation. Specifically, the effect on the fibrillar network is a 3-dimensional conical orientation broadening around the normal to the joint surface, inferred by 3D reconstruction of X-ray scattering peak intensity distributions from the 2D pattern. Further, at the intrafibrillar level, this effect is coupled with reversible reduction in fibrillar pre-strain under compression, alongside increase in the variability of fibrillar pre-strain. In IL-1β degraded cartilage, the collagen rearrangement under cyclic loading is disrupted and associated with reduced tissue stiffness. These finding have implications as to how changes in local collagen nanomechanics might drive disease progression or vice versa in conditions such as osteoarthritis and provides a pathway to a mechanistic understanding of such diseases. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Structural deterioration in biomechanically loaded musculoskeletal organs, e.g., joint osteoarthritis and back pain, are linked to breakdown and changes in their collagen-rich cartilaginous tissue matrix. A critical component enabling cartilage biomechanics is the ultrastructural collagen fibrillar network in cartilage. However, experimental probes of the dynamic structural response of cartilage collagen to biomechanical loads are limited. Here, we use X-ray scattering during cyclic loading (as during walking) on joint tissue to show that cartilage fibrils resist loading by a reversible, three-dimensional orientation broadening and disordering mechanism at the molecular level, and that inflammation reduces this functionality. Our results will help understand how changes to small-scale tissue mechanisms are linked to ageing and osteoarthritic progression, and development of biomaterials for joint replacements. Elsevier 2021-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8631461/ /pubmed/34563724 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2021.09.037 Text en © 2021 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full Length Article
Inamdar, Sheetal R
Prévost, Sylvain
Terrill, Nicholas J
Knight, Martin M
Gupta, Himadri S
Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage
title Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage
title_full Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage
title_fullStr Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage
title_full_unstemmed Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage
title_short Reversible changes in the 3D collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage
title_sort reversible changes in the 3d collagen fibril architecture during cyclic loading of healthy and degraded cartilage
topic Full Length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8631461/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34563724
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2021.09.037
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