In silico modeling of the rheological properties of covalently crosslinked collagen triple helices
David A. Head, Giuseppe Tronci, Stephen J. Russell, David J. Wood

TL;DR
This study introduces a mathematical model to predict the rheological properties of covalently crosslinked collagen hydrogels, aiding the rational design of biomimetic materials with controlled properties.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel in silico model treating collagen triple helices as semi-flexible polymers, accurately predicting experimental rheological trends.
Findings
Model successfully predicts storage modulus based on collagen concentration.
Model captures effects of different crosslinking segments on rheology.
Experimental data aligns with computational predictions.
Abstract
Biomimetic hydrogels based on natural polymers are a promising class of biomaterial, mimicking the natural extra-cellular matrix of biological tissues and providing cues for cell attachment, proliferation and differentiation. With a view to providing an upstream method to guide subsequent experimental design, the aim of this study was to introduce a mathematical model that described the rheological properties of a hydrogel system based on covalently crosslinked collagen triple helices. In light of their organization, such gels exhibit limited collagen bundling that cannot be described by existing fibril network models. The model presented here treats collagen triple helices as discrete semi-flexible polymers, permits full access to metrics for network microstructure, and should provide a comprehensive understanding of the parameter space associated with the development of such…
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