Multi-lipid synergy in synovial lubrication: natural redundancy vs. natural selection
Yifeng Cao, Di Jin, Nir Kampf, and Jacob Klein

TL;DR
This study investigates how diverse lipid mixtures in synovial joints enhance lubrication, revealing a synergy that improves robustness against hemifusion and friction, with implications for osteoarthritis treatment.
Contribution
It demonstrates that multiple lipid types in joint lubrication layers create a synergistic effect that enhances durability and reduces friction, supported by experimental and molecular dynamics evidence.
Findings
Different lipid combinations significantly vary in lubricating ability.
Lipid diversity confers robustness against hemifusion under physiological loads.
Molecular dynamics simulations elucidate the lipid composition's role in lubrication synergy.
Abstract
The very low sliding friction of articular cartilage in the major synovial joints such as hips and knees is crucial for their well-being, and has been attributed to lubrication by phospholipid boundary layers. While single-component lipid layers have demonstrated efficient lubricity in model studies, in living joints there is a large number of different lipids, raising the question of whether this is natural redundancy, or whether this multiplicity confers any benefits. Here we examine lubrication by progressively more complex mixtures of lipids representative of those in joints, using a surface forces balance at physiologically-relevant salt concentrations and pressures. We find that different lipid combinations differ very significantly in their lubricating ability, as manifested by their robustness to hemifusion under physiological loads, pointing to a clear lubrication synergy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthopaedic implants and arthroplasty · Lubricants and Their Additives · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
