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Research Article

Structural Mechanism for Alteration of Collagen Gel Mechanics by Glutaraldehyde Crosslinking

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Pages 285-297 | Received 02 May 2011, Accepted 10 Nov 2011, Published online: 21 Mar 2012
 

Abstract

Soft collagenous tissues that are loaded in vivo undergo crosslinking during aging and wound healing. Bioprosthetic tissues implanted in vivo are also commonly crosslinked with glutaraldehyde (GA). While crosslinking changes the mechanical properties of the tissue, the nature of the mechanical changes and the underlying microstructural mechanism are poorly understood. In this study, a combined mechanical, biochemical and simulation approach was employed to identify the microstructural mechanism by which crosslinking alters mechanical properties. The model collagenous tissue used was an anisotropic cell-compacted collagen gel, and the model crosslinking agent was monomeric GA. The collagen gels were incrementally crosslinked by either increasing the GA concentration or increasing the crosslinking time. In biaxial loading experiments, increased crosslinking produced (1) decreased strain response to a small equibiaxial preload, with little change in response to subsequent loading and (2) decreased coupling between the fiber and cross-fiber direction. The mechanical trend was found to be better described by the lysine consumption data than by the shrinkage temperature. The biaxial loading of incrementally crosslinked collagen gels was simulated computationally with a previously published network model. Crosslinking was represented by increased fibril stiffness or by increased resistance to fibril rotation. Only the latter produced mechanical trends similar to that observed experimentally. Representing crosslinking as increased fibril stiffness did not reproduce the decreased coupling between the fiber and cross-fiber directions. The study concludes that the mechanical changes in crosslinked collagen gels are caused by the microstructural mechanism of increased resistance to fibril rotation.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by NIH R01 HL075639 (JWH). The authors acknowledge Dr. Michael Sacks for sharing the design of his custom biaxial stretcher and Drs. Kevin Costa, Gregory Fomovsky and Eun-Jung Lee for input regarding the design and interpretation of the studies.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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