Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.

Collagen is the primary structural protein in animals. Serving as nanoscale biological ropes, collagen fibrils are responsible for providing strength to a variety of connective tissues such as tendon, skin, and bone. Understanding structure-function relationships in collagenous tissues requires the...

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Main Authors: Andrew S Quigley, Samuel P Veres, Laurent Kreplak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5012574?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-bdac62a979a64ef2aa0b8fcac89a832f2020-11-25T02:05:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01119e016195110.1371/journal.pone.0161951Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.Andrew S QuigleySamuel P VeresLaurent KreplakCollagen is the primary structural protein in animals. Serving as nanoscale biological ropes, collagen fibrils are responsible for providing strength to a variety of connective tissues such as tendon, skin, and bone. Understanding structure-function relationships in collagenous tissues requires the ability to conduct a variety of mechanical experiments on single collagen fibrils. Though significant advances have been made, certain tests are not possible using the techniques currently available. In this report we present a new atomic force microscopy (AFM) based method for tensile manipulation and subsequent nanoscale structural assessment of single collagen fibrils. While the method documented here cannot currently capture force data during loading, it offers the great advantage of allowing structural assessment after subrupture loading. To demonstrate the utility of this technique, we describe the results of 23 tensile experiments in which collagen fibrils were loaded to varying levels of strain and subsequently imaged in both the hydrated and dehydrated states. We show that following a dehydration-rehydration cycle (necessary for sample preparation), fibrils experience an increase in height and decrease in radial modulus in response to one loading-unloading cycle to strain <5%. This change is not altered by a second cycle to strain >5%. In fibril segments that ruptured during their second loading cycle, we show that the fibril structure is affected away from the rupture site in the form of discrete permanent deformations. By comparing the severity of select damage sites in both hydrated and dehydrated conditions, we demonstrate that dehydration masks damage features, leading to an underestimate of the degree of structural disruption. Overall, the method shows promise as a powerful tool for the investigation of structure-function relationships in nanoscale fibrous materials.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5012574?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew S Quigley
Samuel P Veres
Laurent Kreplak
spellingShingle Andrew S Quigley
Samuel P Veres
Laurent Kreplak
Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Andrew S Quigley
Samuel P Veres
Laurent Kreplak
author_sort Andrew S Quigley
title Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.
title_short Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.
title_full Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.
title_fullStr Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.
title_full_unstemmed Bowstring Stretching and Quantitative Imaging of Single Collagen Fibrils via Atomic Force Microscopy.
title_sort bowstring stretching and quantitative imaging of single collagen fibrils via atomic force microscopy.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Collagen is the primary structural protein in animals. Serving as nanoscale biological ropes, collagen fibrils are responsible for providing strength to a variety of connective tissues such as tendon, skin, and bone. Understanding structure-function relationships in collagenous tissues requires the ability to conduct a variety of mechanical experiments on single collagen fibrils. Though significant advances have been made, certain tests are not possible using the techniques currently available. In this report we present a new atomic force microscopy (AFM) based method for tensile manipulation and subsequent nanoscale structural assessment of single collagen fibrils. While the method documented here cannot currently capture force data during loading, it offers the great advantage of allowing structural assessment after subrupture loading. To demonstrate the utility of this technique, we describe the results of 23 tensile experiments in which collagen fibrils were loaded to varying levels of strain and subsequently imaged in both the hydrated and dehydrated states. We show that following a dehydration-rehydration cycle (necessary for sample preparation), fibrils experience an increase in height and decrease in radial modulus in response to one loading-unloading cycle to strain <5%. This change is not altered by a second cycle to strain >5%. In fibril segments that ruptured during their second loading cycle, we show that the fibril structure is affected away from the rupture site in the form of discrete permanent deformations. By comparing the severity of select damage sites in both hydrated and dehydrated conditions, we demonstrate that dehydration masks damage features, leading to an underestimate of the degree of structural disruption. Overall, the method shows promise as a powerful tool for the investigation of structure-function relationships in nanoscale fibrous materials.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5012574?pdf=render
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