Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues

Although the composition and structure of cartilaginous tissues is complex, collagen II fibrils and aggrecan are the most abundant assemblies in both articular cartilage (AC) and the nucleus pulposus (NP) of the intervertebral disc (IVD). Whilst structural heterogeneity of intact aggrecan ( containi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: RJ Craddock, NW Hodson, M Ozols, T Shearer, JA Hoyland, MJ Sherratt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AO Research Institute Davos 2018-02-01
Series:European Cells & Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecmjournal.org/papers/vol035/pdf/v035a04.pdf
id doaj-0343af5034bf44538067426590dffc96
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0343af5034bf44538067426590dffc962020-11-24T23:56:06Zeng AO Research Institute DavosEuropean Cells & Materials1473-22621473-22622018-02-0135345310.22203/eCM.v035a04Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissuesRJ CraddockNW HodsonM OzolsT ShearerJA HoylandMJ Sherratt0Faculty of Biology Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PT, UKAlthough the composition and structure of cartilaginous tissues is complex, collagen II fibrils and aggrecan are the most abundant assemblies in both articular cartilage (AC) and the nucleus pulposus (NP) of the intervertebral disc (IVD). Whilst structural heterogeneity of intact aggrecan ( containing three globular domains) is well characterised, the extent of aggrecan fragmentation in healthy tissues is poorly defined. Using young, yet skeletally mature (18-30 months), bovine AC and NP tissues, it was shown that, whilst the ultrastructure of intact aggrecan was tissue-dependent, most molecules (AC: 95 %; NP: 99.5 %) were fragmented (lacking one or more globular domains). Fragments were significantly smaller and more structurally heterogeneous in the NP compared with the AC (molecular area; AC: 8543 nm2; NP: 4625 nm2; p < 0.0001). In contrast, fibrillar collagen appeared structurally intact and tissue-invariant. Molecular fragmentation is considered indicative of a pathology; however, these young, skeletally mature tissues were histologically and mechanically (reduced modulus: AC: ≈ 500 kPa; NP: ≈ 80 kPa) comparable to healthy tissues and devoid of notable gelatinase activity (compared with rat dermis). As aggrecan fragmentation was prevalent in neonatal bovine AC (99.5 % fragmented, molecular area: 5137 nm2) as compared with mature AC (95.0 % fragmented, molecular area: 8667 nm2), it was hypothesised that targeted proteolysis might be an adaptive process that modified aggrecan packing (as simulated computationally) and, hence, tissue charge density, mechanical properties and porosity. These observations provided a baseline against which pathological and/or age-related fragmentation of aggrecan could be assessed and suggested that new strategies might be required to engineer constructs that mimic the mechanical properties of native cartilaginous tissues.http://www.ecmjournal.org/papers/vol035/pdf/v035a04.pdfCartilageintervertebral discextracellular matrixaggrecanglycosaminoglycansprotein structureprotein homeostasisnanomechanicsstructural biology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author RJ Craddock
NW Hodson
M Ozols
T Shearer
JA Hoyland
MJ Sherratt
spellingShingle RJ Craddock
NW Hodson
M Ozols
T Shearer
JA Hoyland
MJ Sherratt
Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues
European Cells & Materials
Cartilage
intervertebral disc
extracellular matrix
aggrecan
glycosaminoglycans
protein structure
protein homeostasis
nanomechanics
structural biology
author_facet RJ Craddock
NW Hodson
M Ozols
T Shearer
JA Hoyland
MJ Sherratt
author_sort RJ Craddock
title Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues
title_short Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues
title_full Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues
title_fullStr Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues
title_full_unstemmed Extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues
title_sort extracellular matrix fragmentation in young, healthy cartilaginous tissues
publisher AO Research Institute Davos
series European Cells & Materials
issn 1473-2262
1473-2262
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Although the composition and structure of cartilaginous tissues is complex, collagen II fibrils and aggrecan are the most abundant assemblies in both articular cartilage (AC) and the nucleus pulposus (NP) of the intervertebral disc (IVD). Whilst structural heterogeneity of intact aggrecan ( containing three globular domains) is well characterised, the extent of aggrecan fragmentation in healthy tissues is poorly defined. Using young, yet skeletally mature (18-30 months), bovine AC and NP tissues, it was shown that, whilst the ultrastructure of intact aggrecan was tissue-dependent, most molecules (AC: 95 %; NP: 99.5 %) were fragmented (lacking one or more globular domains). Fragments were significantly smaller and more structurally heterogeneous in the NP compared with the AC (molecular area; AC: 8543 nm2; NP: 4625 nm2; p < 0.0001). In contrast, fibrillar collagen appeared structurally intact and tissue-invariant. Molecular fragmentation is considered indicative of a pathology; however, these young, skeletally mature tissues were histologically and mechanically (reduced modulus: AC: ≈ 500 kPa; NP: ≈ 80 kPa) comparable to healthy tissues and devoid of notable gelatinase activity (compared with rat dermis). As aggrecan fragmentation was prevalent in neonatal bovine AC (99.5 % fragmented, molecular area: 5137 nm2) as compared with mature AC (95.0 % fragmented, molecular area: 8667 nm2), it was hypothesised that targeted proteolysis might be an adaptive process that modified aggrecan packing (as simulated computationally) and, hence, tissue charge density, mechanical properties and porosity. These observations provided a baseline against which pathological and/or age-related fragmentation of aggrecan could be assessed and suggested that new strategies might be required to engineer constructs that mimic the mechanical properties of native cartilaginous tissues.
topic Cartilage
intervertebral disc
extracellular matrix
aggrecan
glycosaminoglycans
protein structure
protein homeostasis
nanomechanics
structural biology
url http://www.ecmjournal.org/papers/vol035/pdf/v035a04.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT rjcraddock extracellularmatrixfragmentationinyounghealthycartilaginoustissues
AT nwhodson extracellularmatrixfragmentationinyounghealthycartilaginoustissues
AT mozols extracellularmatrixfragmentationinyounghealthycartilaginoustissues
AT tshearer extracellularmatrixfragmentationinyounghealthycartilaginoustissues
AT jahoyland extracellularmatrixfragmentationinyounghealthycartilaginoustissues
AT mjsherratt extracellularmatrixfragmentationinyounghealthycartilaginoustissues
_version_ 1725459601571184640