Literature DB >> 17142289

Lateral nanomechanics of cartilage aggrecan macromolecules.

Lin Han1, Delphine Dean, Christine Ortiz, Alan J Grodzinsky.   

Abstract

To explore the role of the brush-like proteoglycan, aggrecan, in the shear behavior of cartilage tissue, we measured the lateral resistance to deformation of a monolayer of chemically end-attached cartilage aggrecan on a microcontact printed surface in aqueous NaCl solutions via lateral force microscopy. The effects of bath ionic strength (IS, 0.001-1.0 M) and lateral displacement rate (approximately 1-100 microm/s) were studied using probe tips functionalized with neutral hydroxyl-terminated self-assembled alkanethiol monolayers. Probe tips having two different end-radii (R approximately 50 nm and 2.5 microm) enabled access to different length-scales of interactions (nano and micro). The measured lateral force was observed to depend linearly on the applied normal force, and the lateral force to normal force proportionality constant, mu, was calculated. The value mu increased (from 0.03 +/- 0.01 to 0.11 +/- 0.01) with increasing bath IS (0.001-1.0 M) for experiments using the microsized tip due to the larger compressive strain of aggrecan that resulted from increased IS at constant compressive force. With the nanosized tip, mu also increased with IS but by a smaller amount due to the fewer number of aggrecan involved in shear deformation. The variations in lateral force as a function of applied compressive strain epsilon(n) and changes in bath IS suggested that both electrostatic and nonelectrostatic interactions contributed significantly to the shear deformational behavior of the aggrecan layers. While lateral force did not vary with lateral displacement rate at low IS, where elastic-like electrostatic interactions between aggrecan dominated, lateral force increased significantly with displacement rate at physiological and higher IS, suggestive of additional viscoelastic and/or poroelastic interactions within the aggrecan layer. These data provide insights into molecular-level deformation of aggrecan macromolecules that are important to the understanding of cartilage behavior.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17142289      PMCID: PMC1783866          DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.106.091397

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biophys J        ISSN: 0006-3495            Impact factor:   4.033


  26 in total

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  23 in total

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6.  Age-related nanostructural and nanomechanical changes of individual human cartilage aggrecan monomers and their glycosaminoglycan side chains.

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7.  Time-dependent nanomechanics of cartilage.

Authors:  Lin Han; Eliot H Frank; Jacqueline J Greene; Hsu-Yi Lee; Han-Hwa K Hung; Alan J Grodzinsky; Christine Ortiz
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8.  Friction Force Microscopy of Lubricin and Hyaluronic Acid between Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Surfaces.

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