4.8 Article

Enhanced microscopic dynamics in mucus gels under a mechanical load in the linear viscoelastic regime

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2103995118

Keywords

mucus; rheology; dynamic light scattering; stress relaxation; microscopic dynamics

Funding

  1. French Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales
  2. CNRS
  3. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-14-CE32-0005, ANR-20-CE06-0028]
  4. Association Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie [2014/0109]
  5. Institut Universitaire de France
  6. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-14-CE32-0005, ANR-20-CE06-0028] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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Mucus is a biological gel that plays essential roles in protecting tissues. Research shows that moderate shear stress can significantly enhance the reorganization of mucus at the microscopic level, providing insights into the dynamics of mucus rearrangement and potential implications for various phenomena.
Mucus is a biological gel covering the surface of several tissues and ensuring key biological functions, including as a protective barrier against dehydration, pathogen penetration, or gastric acids. Mucus biological functioning requires a finely tuned balance between solid-like and fluid-like mechanical response, ensured reversible bonds between mucins, the glycoproteins that form the gel. In living organisms, mucus is subject to various kinds mechanical stresses, e.g., due to osmosis, bacterial penetration, coughing, and gastric peristalsis. However, our knowledge of the effects of stress on mucus is still rudimentary and mostly limited to macroscopic rheological measurements, with no insight into the relevant microscopic mechanisms. Here, we run mechanical tests simultaneously to measurements of the microscopic dynamics pig gastric mucus. Strikingly, we find that a modest shear stress, within the macroscopic rheological linear regime, dramatically enhances mucus reorganization at the microscopic level, as sig-naled by a transient acceleration of the microscopic dynamics, by up to 2 orders of magnitude. We rationalize these findings by proposing a simple, yet general, model for the dynamics physical gels under strain and validate its assumptions through numerical simulations of spring networks. These results shed light on the rearrangement dynamics of mucus at the microscopic scale, with potential implications in phenomena ranging from mucus clearance to bacterial and drug penetration.

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