Molecular and morphological adaptations in compressed articular cartilage by polarized light microscopy and Fourier-transform infrared imaging

利用偏振光显微镜和傅里叶变换红外成像技术研究受压关节软骨的分子和形态学适应性变化

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Abstract

Fifteen articular cartilage-bone specimens from one canine humeral joint were compressed in the strain range of 0-50%. The deformation of the extracellular matrices in cartilage was preserved and the same tissue sections were studied using polarized light microscopy (PLM) and Fourier-transform infrared imaging (FTIRI). The PLM results show that the most significant changes in the apparent zone thickness due to 'reorganization' of the collagen fibrils based on the birefringence occur between 0% and 20% strain values, where the increase in the superficial zone and decrease in the radial zone thicknesses are approximately linear with the applied strain. The FTIRI anisotropy results show that the two amide components with bond direction perpendicular to the external compression retain anisotropy (amide II in the superficial zone and amide I in the radial zone). In contrast, the measured anisotropy from the two amide components with bond direction parallel to the external compression changes their anisotropy significantly (amide I in the superficial zone and amide II in the radial zone). Statistical analysis shows that there is an excellent correlation (r=0.98) between the relative depth of the minimum retardance in PLM and the relative depth of the amide II anisotropic cross-over. The changes in amide anisotropies in different histological zones are explained by the strain-dependent tipping angle of the amide bonds. These depth-dependent adaptations to static loading in cartilage's morphological structure and chemical distribution could be useful in the future studies of the early diseased cartilage.

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