The influence of AGEs and enzymatic cross-links on the mechanical properties of collagen fibrils
Julia Kamml, Chun-Yu Ke, Claire Acevedo, David Kammer

TL;DR
This study uses molecular modeling to investigate how AGEs and enzymatic cross-links affect collagen fibril mechanics, revealing that high AGEs levels increase stiffness and brittleness, which explains tissue deterioration in aging and diabetes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed mechanistic analysis of how AGEs and enzymatic cross-links differentially influence collagen fibril deformation and failure.
Findings
High AGEs content stiffens collagen fibrils at high strain
Increased AGEs correlates with higher fibril strength and abrupt failure
AGEs inhibit intra-fibrillar sliding, leading to brittleness
Abstract
Cross-links are considered to be a key component of collagen fibrils as they can change the fibrillar behavior in various ways. Advanced-Glycation Endproducts (AGEs), one particular type of cross-links, have been shown to accumulate and impair the mechanical properties of collageneous tissues, whereas enzymatic cross-links (ECLs) are known for stabilizing the structure of the fibril. However, the reasons for whether a given type of cross-link improves or impairs the material properties remain unknown. Here, we use coarse-grained steered molecular models to evaluate the effect of AGEs and ECLs cross-links content on the deformation and failure properties of collagen fibrils. Our simulations show that the collagen fibrils stiffen at high strain levels when the AGEs content exceeds a critical value. In addition, the strength of the fibril increases with AGEs accumulation. By analyzing the…
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