Collagen, the most abundant protein in the human body, must withstand high mechanical loads due to its structural role in tendons, skin, bones, and other connective tissue. It was recently found that tensed collagen creates mechanoradicals by homolytic bond scission. We here employ scale-bridging simulations to determine the influence of collagen's mesoscale fibril structure on molecular breakages, combining atomistic molecular dynamics simulations with a newly developed mesoscopic ultra-coarse-grained description of a collagen fibril.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCollagen is a force-bearing, hierarchical structural protein important to all connective tissue. In tendon collagen, high load even below macroscopic failure level creates mechanoradicals by homolytic bond scission, similar to polymers. The location and type of initial rupture sites critically decide on both the mechanical and chemical impact of these micro-ruptures on the tissue, but are yet to be explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFType I collagen is the main structural component of many tissues in the human body. It provides excellent mechanical properties to connective tissue and acts as a protein interaction hub. There is thus a wide interest in understanding the properties and diverse functions of type I collagen at the molecular level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs established nearly a century ago, mechanoradicals originate from homolytic bond scission in polymers. The existence, nature and biological relevance of mechanoradicals in proteins, instead, are unknown. We here show that mechanical stress on collagen produces radicals and subsequently reactive oxygen species, essential biological signaling molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins are exposed to various mechanical loads that can lead to covalent bond scissions even before macroscopic failure occurs. Knowledge of these molecular breakages is important to understand mechanical properties of the protein. In regular molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, covalent bonds are predefined, and reactions cannot occur.
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