Probing multi-scale mechanics of peripheral nerve collagen and myelin by X-ray diffraction.

J Mech Behav Biomed Mater

Institute of Biomedical Engineering (IBME), Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, OX3 7DQ, UK. Electronic address:

Published: November 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Peripheral nerves face mechanical forces from daily movements and injuries, but current models mainly address overall tissue behavior without exploring micro-level effects.
  • This study aimed to connect macroscopic tensile forces to micro-level deformations in peripheral nerves, focusing on the myelin sheath and collagen structures using X-ray diffraction and video analysis.
  • Findings revealed that nerve tension results in axial elongation and circumferential compression, with the myelin sheath providing stiffness for protection and indicating complex deformation mechanisms at play, which could lead to improved nerve regeneration strategies.

Article Abstract

Peripheral nerves are continuously subjected to mechanical forces, both during everyday movement and as a result of traumatic events. Current mechanical models focus on explaining the macroscopic behaviour of the tissue, but do not investigate how tissue strain translates to deformations at the microstructural level. Predicting the effect of macro-scale loading can help explain changes in nerve function and suggest new strategies for prevention and therapy. The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between macroscopic tensile loading and micro scale deformation in structures thought to be mechanically active in peripheral nerves: the myelin sheath enveloping axons, and axially aligned epineurial collagen fibrils. The microstructure was probed using X-ray diffraction during in situ tensile loading, measuring the micro-scale deformation in collagen and myelin, combined with high definition macroscopic video extensiometry. At a tissue level, tensile loading elongates nerves axially, whilst simultaneously compressing circumferentially. The non-linear behaviour observed in both directions is evidence, circumferentially, that the nerve core components have the ability to rearrange before bearing load and axially, of a recruitment process in epineurial collagen. At the molecular level, axially aligned epineurial collagen fibrils are strained, whilst the myelin sheath enveloping axons is compressed circumferentially. During induced compression, the myelin sheath shows high circumferential stiffness, indicating a possible role in mechanical protection of axons. The myelin sheath is deformed from low loads, despite the non-linearity of whole tissue compression, indicating more than one mechanism contributing to myelin compression. Epineurial collagen shows similar load-bearing characteristics to those of other collagenous connective tissues. This new microstructural knowledge is key to understand peripheral nerve mechanical behaviour, and will support new regenerative strategies for traumatic and repetitive injury.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2018.07.030DOI Listing

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