| Literature DB >> 28139663 |
Yang Wu1, Yu Dong1, Jia Jiang1, Haiqing Li2, Tongming Zhu3, Shiyi Chen1.
Abstract
Injuries to the Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) and Rotator Cuff Tendon (RCT) are common in physically active and elderly individuals. The development of an artificial prosthesis for reconstruction/repair of ACL and RCT injuries is of increasing interest due to the need for viable tissue and reduced surgically-related co-morbidity. An optimal prosthesis design is still elusive, therefore an improved understanding of the bone-soft tissue interface is extremely urgent. In this work, Raman spectral mapping was used to analyze, at the micron level, the chemical composition and corresponding structure of the bone-soft tissue interface. Raman spectroscopic mapping was performed using a Raman spectrometer with a 785 nm laser coupled to a microscope. Line-mapping procedure was performed on the ACL and RCT bone insertion sites. The classical least squares (CLS) fitting model was created from reference spectra derived from pure bone and soft-tissue components, and spectral maps collected at multiple sites from ACL and RCT specimens. The results suggest that different source of interface shows different boundary, even they seems have the same components. Compared to the common histology results, it provided intact molecular information that can easily distinguished some relative component change.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28139663 PMCID: PMC5282521 DOI: 10.1038/srep38706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The gross observation & hisotology images.
The ACL (A,C,E) and RCT (B,D,F), (C,D) H&E Staining; (E,F) Masson Staining; NFC: non-mineralized fibrocartilage; MFC: The mineralized fibrocartilage Magnification 50×.
Figure 2The spectrum of the ACL and RCT insertions.
The upper (A–C) shows the spectrum of the ACL insertion, the bottom (D–F) shows the spectrum of the RCT insertion. Those two different sites present the similar spectrum.
Raman shifts/cm−1 and assignments of the bands of observed in the interface.
| Raman shifts/cm−1 | Assignment |
|---|---|
| 760 | Tryptophan (proteins) |
| 816 | Collagen–other proteins, υ C-C protein backbone |
| 855 | Proline, hydroxyproline, tyrosine C-C stretching, proline (collagen assignment) |
| 937 | Amino acid side chain vibrations of proline and hydroxyproline, as well as a (C-C) vibration of the collagen backbone |
| 960 | Symmetric stretching vibration of υ1 PO43− (phosphate of HA) |
| 1002 | Phenylalanine (collagen assignment) |
| 1031 | Carbohydrate residues of collagen |
| 1100 | C-C vibration mode of the gauche-bonded chain |
| 1208 | A,T (ring breathing modes of the DNA/RNA bases)-amide III (protein) |
| 1246 | Amide III (of collagen) |
| 1314 | CH3CH2 twisting (collagen assignment) |
| 1319 | CH3CH2 twisting (collagen assignment) |
| 1342 | CH3, CH2 wagging (collagen assignment) |
| 1424 | Deoxyribose, (B,Z-marker) |
| 1451 | CH2CH3 deformation (collagen assignment) |
| 1663 | Proteins, including collagen I |
| 1665 | Amide I (of collagen) |
Figure 3The schematic of how the slope was obtained based on the results of CLS Fitting both by ACLs and RCTs.
The results of the comparison of the ACL and RCT slopes and R2, *stands for p < 0.05.