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    Collagen Fiber Alignment Does Not Explain Mechanical Anisotropy in Fibroblast Populated Collagen Gels

    Source: Journal of Biomechanical Engineering:;2007:;volume( 129 ):;issue: 005::page 642
    Author:
    Stavros Thomopoulos
    ,
    Gregory M. Fomovsky
    ,
    Preethi L. Chandran
    ,
    Jeffrey W. Holmes
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2768104
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Many load-bearing soft tissues exhibit mechanical anisotropy. In order to understand the behavior of natural tissues and to create tissue engineered replacements, quantitative relationships must be developed between the tissue structures and their mechanical behavior. We used a novel collagen gel system to test the hypothesis that collagen fiber alignment is the primary mechanism for the mechanical anisotropy we have reported in structurally anisotropic gels. Loading constraints applied during culture were used to control the structural organization of the collagen fibers of fibroblast populated collagen gels. Gels constrained uniaxially during culture developed fiber alignment and a high degree of mechanical anisotropy, while gels constrained biaxially remained isotropic with randomly distributed collagen fibers. We hypothesized that the mechanical anisotropy that developed in these gels was due primarily to collagen fiber orientation. We tested this hypothesis using two mathematical models that incorporated measured collagen fiber orientations: a structural continuum model that assumes affine fiber kinematics and a network model that allows for nonaffine fiber kinematics. Collagen fiber mechanical properties were determined by fitting biaxial mechanical test data from isotropic collagen gels. The fiber properties of each isotropic gel were then used to predict the biaxial mechanical behavior of paired anisotropic gels. Both models accurately described the isotropic collagen gel behavior. However, the structural continuum model dramatically underestimated the level of mechanical anisotropy in aligned collagen gels despite incorporation of measured fiber orientations; when estimated remodeling-induced changes in collagen fiber length were included, the continuum model slightly overestimated mechanical anisotropy. The network model provided the closest match to experimental data from aligned collagen gels, but still did not fully explain the observed mechanics. Two different modeling approaches showed that the level of collagen fiber alignment in our uniaxially constrained gels cannot explain the high degree of mechanical anisotropy observed in these gels. Our modeling results suggest that remodeling-induced redistribution of collagen fiber lengths, nonaffine fiber kinematics, or some combination of these effects must also be considered in order to explain the dramatic mechanical anisotropy observed in this collagen gel model system.
    keyword(s): Fibers , Anisotropy , Network models , Fibroblasts , Stress , Mechanical testing , Deformation AND Modeling ,
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      Collagen Fiber Alignment Does Not Explain Mechanical Anisotropy in Fibroblast Populated Collagen Gels

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/135209
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    contributor authorStavros Thomopoulos
    contributor authorGregory M. Fomovsky
    contributor authorPreethi L. Chandran
    contributor authorJeffrey W. Holmes
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:22:41Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:22:41Z
    date copyrightOctober, 2007
    date issued2007
    identifier issn0148-0731
    identifier otherJBENDY-26753#642_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/135209
    description abstractMany load-bearing soft tissues exhibit mechanical anisotropy. In order to understand the behavior of natural tissues and to create tissue engineered replacements, quantitative relationships must be developed between the tissue structures and their mechanical behavior. We used a novel collagen gel system to test the hypothesis that collagen fiber alignment is the primary mechanism for the mechanical anisotropy we have reported in structurally anisotropic gels. Loading constraints applied during culture were used to control the structural organization of the collagen fibers of fibroblast populated collagen gels. Gels constrained uniaxially during culture developed fiber alignment and a high degree of mechanical anisotropy, while gels constrained biaxially remained isotropic with randomly distributed collagen fibers. We hypothesized that the mechanical anisotropy that developed in these gels was due primarily to collagen fiber orientation. We tested this hypothesis using two mathematical models that incorporated measured collagen fiber orientations: a structural continuum model that assumes affine fiber kinematics and a network model that allows for nonaffine fiber kinematics. Collagen fiber mechanical properties were determined by fitting biaxial mechanical test data from isotropic collagen gels. The fiber properties of each isotropic gel were then used to predict the biaxial mechanical behavior of paired anisotropic gels. Both models accurately described the isotropic collagen gel behavior. However, the structural continuum model dramatically underestimated the level of mechanical anisotropy in aligned collagen gels despite incorporation of measured fiber orientations; when estimated remodeling-induced changes in collagen fiber length were included, the continuum model slightly overestimated mechanical anisotropy. The network model provided the closest match to experimental data from aligned collagen gels, but still did not fully explain the observed mechanics. Two different modeling approaches showed that the level of collagen fiber alignment in our uniaxially constrained gels cannot explain the high degree of mechanical anisotropy observed in these gels. Our modeling results suggest that remodeling-induced redistribution of collagen fiber lengths, nonaffine fiber kinematics, or some combination of these effects must also be considered in order to explain the dramatic mechanical anisotropy observed in this collagen gel model system.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleCollagen Fiber Alignment Does Not Explain Mechanical Anisotropy in Fibroblast Populated Collagen Gels
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume129
    journal issue5
    journal titleJournal of Biomechanical Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2768104
    journal fristpage642
    journal lastpage650
    identifier eissn1528-8951
    keywordsFibers
    keywordsAnisotropy
    keywordsNetwork models
    keywordsFibroblasts
    keywordsStress
    keywordsMechanical testing
    keywordsDeformation AND Modeling
    treeJournal of Biomechanical Engineering:;2007:;volume( 129 ):;issue: 005
    contenttypeFulltext
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