M.E. Müller Institute for Structural Biology, Biozentrum University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Biophys J. 2010 Jun 2;98(11):2731-40. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2010.02.013.
As documented previously, articular cartilage exhibits a scale-dependent dynamic stiffness when probed by indentation-type atomic force microscopy (IT-AFM). In this study, a micrometer-size spherical tip revealed an unimodal stiffness distribution (which we refer to as microstiffness), whereas probing articular cartilage with a nanometer-size pyramidal tip resulted in a bimodal nanostiffness distribution. We concluded that indentation of the cartilage's soft proteoglycan (PG) gel gave rise to the lower nanostiffness peak, whereas deformation of its collagen fibrils yielded the higher nanostiffness peak. To test our hypothesis, we produced a gel-microfiber composite consisting of a chondroitin sulfate-containing agarose gel and a fibrillar poly(ethylene glycol)-terephthalate/poly(butylene)-terephthalate block copolymer. In striking analogy to articular cartilage, the microstiffness distribution of the synthetic composite was unimodal, whereas its nanostiffness exhibited a bimodal distribution. Also, similar to the case with cartilage, addition of the negatively charged chondroitin sulfate rendered the gel-microfiber composite's water content responsive to salt. When the ionic strength of the surrounding buffer solution increased from 0.15 to 2 M NaCl, the cartilage's microstiffness increased by 21%, whereas that of the synthetic biomaterial went up by 31%. When the nanostiffness was measured after the ionic strength was raised by the same amount, the cartilage's lower peak increased by 28%, whereas that of the synthetic biomaterial went up by 34%. Of interest, the higher peak values remained unchanged for both materials. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the nanoscale lower peak is a measure of the soft PG gel, and the nanoscale higher peak measures collagen fibril stiffness. In contrast, the micrometer-scale measurements fail to resolve separate stiffness values for the PG and collagen fibril moieties. Therefore, we propose to use nanostiffness as a new biomarker to analyze structure-function relationships in normal, diseased, and engineered cartilage.
如前所述,关节软骨在受到压痕原子力显微镜(IT-AFM)探测时表现出尺度相关的动态硬度。在这项研究中,微米级大小的球形探针揭示了单峰硬度分布(我们称之为微硬度),而使用纳米级金字塔形探针探测关节软骨则导致双峰纳米硬度分布。我们得出的结论是,软骨的软蛋白聚糖(PG)凝胶的压痕导致了较低的纳米硬度峰值,而其胶原纤维的变形则产生了较高的纳米硬度峰值。为了验证我们的假设,我们制备了一种由含有硫酸软骨素的琼脂糖凝胶和纤维状聚(乙二醇)-对苯二甲酸/聚(丁二醇)-对苯二甲酸嵌段共聚物组成的凝胶-微纤维复合材料。与关节软骨惊人的相似,合成复合材料的微硬度分布呈单峰,而其纳米硬度呈双峰分布。此外,与软骨的情况类似,添加带负电荷的硫酸软骨素使凝胶-微纤维复合材料的含水量对盐敏感。当周围缓冲溶液的离子强度从 0.15 增加到 2 M NaCl 时,软骨的微硬度增加了 21%,而合成生物材料的硬度增加了 31%。当离子强度增加相同量后测量纳米硬度时,软骨的较低峰值增加了 28%,而合成生物材料的硬度增加了 34%。有趣的是,两种材料的较高峰值值保持不变。综上所述,这些结果表明,纳米级较低的峰值是软 PG 凝胶的度量,纳米级较高的峰值测量胶原纤维的硬度。相比之下,微米级的测量无法分辨 PG 和胶原纤维部分的单独硬度值。因此,我们建议使用纳米硬度作为一种新的生物标志物来分析正常、患病和工程化软骨的结构-功能关系。