Quinn T M, Morel V
Cartilage Biomechanics Group, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL Station 15, AI 1234, CH-1015, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Biomech Model Mechanobiol. 2007 Jan;6(1-2):73-82. doi: 10.1007/s10237-006-0036-z. Epub 2006 May 20.
Cartilage matrix mechanical function is largely determined by interactions between the collagen fibrillar network and the proteoglycan gel. Although the molecular physics of these matrix constituents have been characterized and modern imaging methods are capable of localized measurement of molecular densities and orientation distributions, theoretical tools for using this information for prediction of cartilage mechanical behavior are lacking. We introduce a means to model collagen network contributions to cartilage mechanics based upon accessible microstructural information (fibril density and orientation distributions) and which self-consistently follows changes in microstructural geometry with matrix deformations. The interplay between the molecular physics of the collagen network and the proteoglycan gel is scaled up to determine matrix material properties, with features such as collagen fibril pre-stress in free-swelling cartilage emerging naturally and without introduction of ad hoc parameters. Methods are developed for theoretical treatment of the collagen network as a continuum-like distribution of fibrils, such that mechanical analysis of the network may be simplified by consideration of the spherical harmonic components of functions of the fibril orientation, strain, and stress distributions. Expressions for the collagen network contributions to matrix stress and stiffness tensors are derived, illustrating that only spherical harmonic components of orders 0 and 2 contribute to the stress, while orders 0, 2, and 4 contribute to the stiffness. Depth- and compression-dependent equilibrium mechanical properties of cartilage matrix are modeled, and advantages of the approach are illustrated by exploration of orientation and strain distributions of collagen fibrils in compressed cartilage. Results highlight collagen-proteoglycan interactions, especially for very small physiological strains where experimental data are relatively sparse. These methods for determining matrix mechanical properties from measurable quantities at the microscale (composition, structure, and molecular physics) may be useful for investigating cartilage structure-function relationships relevant to load-bearing, injury, and repair.
软骨基质的力学功能在很大程度上由胶原纤维网络与蛋白聚糖凝胶之间的相互作用决定。尽管这些基质成分的分子物理学特性已得到表征,且现代成像方法能够对分子密度和取向分布进行局部测量,但仍缺乏利用这些信息预测软骨力学行为的理论工具。我们引入了一种基于可获取的微观结构信息(纤维密度和取向分布)对胶原网络对软骨力学的贡献进行建模的方法,该方法能自洽地跟踪微观结构几何形状随基质变形的变化。将胶原网络与蛋白聚糖凝胶的分子物理学之间的相互作用进行放大,以确定基质材料特性,自由膨胀软骨中的胶原纤维预应力等特征自然出现,无需引入特设参数。开发了将胶原网络视为类似连续纤维分布的理论处理方法,这样通过考虑纤维取向、应变和应力分布函数的球谐分量,可简化对网络的力学分析。推导了胶原网络对基质应力和刚度张量贡献的表达式,表明只有0阶和2阶球谐分量对应力有贡献,而0阶、2阶和4阶对应力刚度有贡献。对软骨基质深度和压缩相关的平衡力学特性进行了建模,并通过研究压缩软骨中胶原纤维的取向和应变分布说明了该方法的优势。结果突出了胶原 - 蛋白聚糖相互作用,特别是在实验数据相对稀少的非常小的生理应变情况下。这些从微观尺度可测量量(组成、结构和分子物理学)确定基质力学特性的方法,可能有助于研究与承重、损伤和修复相关的软骨结构 - 功能关系。