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Failure of mineralized collagen fibrils: modeling the role of collagen cross-linking
Authors:Siegmund Thomas  Allen Matthew R  Burr David B
Affiliation:

aSchool of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, USA

bDepartment of Anatomy and Cell Biology, USA

cDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, USA

dDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Indiana University—Purdue University at Indianapolis, USA

Abstract:Experimental evidence demonstrates that collagen cross-linking in bone tissue significantly influences its deformation and failure behavior yet difficulties exist in determining the independent biomechanical effects of collagen cross-linking using in vitro and in vivo experiments. The aim of this study is to use a nano-scale composite material model of mineral and collagen to determine the independent roles of enzymatic and non-enzymatic cross-linking on the mechanical behavior of a mineralized collagen fibril. Stress–strain curves were obtained under tensile loading conditions without any collagen cross-links, with only enzymatic cross-links (modeled by cross-linking the end terminal position of each collagen domain), or with only non-enzymatic cross-links (modeled by random placement of cross-links within the collagen–collagen interfaces). Our results show enzymatic collagen cross-links have minimal effect on the predicted stress–strain curve and produce a ductile material that fails through debonding of the mineral–collagen interface. Conversely, non-enzymatic cross-links significantly alter the predicted stress–strain response by inhibiting collagen sliding. This inhibition leads to greater load transfer to the mineral, which minimally affects the predicted stress, increases modulus and decreases post-yield strain and toughness. As a consequence the toughness of bone that has more non-enzymatically mediated collagen cross-links will be drastically reduced.
Keywords:Bone   Computational mechanics   Fibril   Collagen   Cross-linking
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