4.8 Article

Interfibrillar shear stress is the loading mechanism of collagen fibrils in tendon

Journal

ACTA BIOMATERIALIA
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages 2582-2590

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2014.01.032

Keywords

Interfibrillar shear stress; Fibril sliding; Multiscale testing; Shear lag model; Tendon

Funding

  1. NIH COBRE [NIH/NCRR P20 RR016458]

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Despite the critical role tendons play in transmitting loads throughout the musculoskeletal system, little is known about the microstructural mechanisms underlying their mechanical function. Of particular interest is whether collagen fibrils in tendon fascicles bear load independently or if load is transferred between fibrils through interfibrillar shear forces. We conducted multiscale experimental testing and developed a microstructural shear lag model to explicitly test whether interfibrillar shear load transfer is indeed the fibrillar loading mechanism in tendon. Experimental correlations between fascicle macroscale mechanics and microscale interfibrillar sliding suggest that fibrils are discontinuous and share load. Moreover, for the first time, we demonstrate that a shear lag model can replicate the fascicle macroscale mechanics as well as predict the microscale fibrillar deformations. Since interfibrillar shear stress is the fundamental loading mechanism assumed in the model, this result provides strong evidence that load is transferred between fibrils in tendon and possibly other aligned collagenous tissues. Conclusively establishing this fibrillar loading mechanism and identifying the involved structural components should help develop repair strategies for tissue degeneration and guide the design of tissue engineered replacements. (C) 2014 Acts Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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