70 research outputs found

    Quantitative structural mechanobiology of platelet-driven blood clot contraction.

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    Blood clot contraction plays an important role in prevention of bleeding and in thrombotic disorders. Here, we unveil and quantify the structural mechanisms of clot contraction at the level of single platelets. A key elementary step of contraction is sequential extension-retraction of platelet filopodia attached to fibrin fibers. In contrast to other cell-matrix systems in which cells migrate along fibers, the "hand-over-hand" longitudinal pulling causes shortening and bending of platelet-attached fibers, resulting in formation of fiber kinks. When attached to multiple fibers, platelets densify the fibrin network by pulling on fibers transversely to their longitudinal axes. Single platelets and aggregates use actomyosin contractile machinery and integrin-mediated adhesion to remodel the extracellular matrix, inducing compaction of fibrin into bundled agglomerates tightly associated with activated platelets. The revealed platelet-driven mechanisms of blood clot contraction demonstrate an important new biological application of cell motility principles

    Foam-like compression behavior of fibrin networks

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    The rheological properties of fibrin networks have been of long-standing interest. As such there is a wealth of studies of their shear and tensile responses, but their compressive behavior remains unexplored. Here, by characterization of the network structure with synchronous measurement of the fibrin storage and loss moduli at increasing degrees of compression, we show that the compressive behavior of fibrin networks is similar to that of cellular solids. A non-linear stress-strain response of fibrin consists of three regimes: 1) an initial linear regime, in which most fibers are straight, 2) a plateau regime, in which more and more fibers buckle and collapse, and 3) a markedly non-linear regime, in which network densification occurs {{by bending of buckled fibers}} and inter-fiber contacts. Importantly, the spatially non-uniform network deformation included formation of a moving "compression front" along the axis of strain, which segregated the fibrin network into compartments with different fiber densities and structure. The Young's modulus of the linear phase depends quadratically on the fibrin volume fraction while that in the densified phase depends cubically on it. The viscoelastic plateau regime corresponds to a mixture of these two phases in which the fractions of the two phases change during compression. We model this regime using a continuum theory of phase transitions and analytically predict the storage and loss moduli which are in good agreement with the experimental data. Our work shows that fibrin networks are a member of a broad class of natural cellular materials which includes cancellous bone, wood and cork

    Mechanism of Fibrin(ogen) Forced Unfolding

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    SummaryFibrinogen, upon enzymatic conversion to monomeric fibrin, provides the building blocks for fibrin polymer, the scaffold of blood clots and thrombi. Little has been known about the force-induced unfolding of fibrin(ogen), even though it is the foundation for the mechanical and rheological properties of fibrin, which are essential for hemostasis. We determined mechanisms and mapped the free energy landscape of the elongation of fibrin(ogen) monomers and oligomers through combined experimental and theoretical studies of the nanomechanical properties of fibrin(ogen), using atomic force microscopy-based single-molecule unfolding and simulations in the experimentally relevant timescale. We have found that mechanical unraveling of fibrin(ogen) is determined by the combined molecular transitions that couple stepwise unfolding of the γ chain nodules and reversible extension-contraction of the α-helical coiled-coil connectors. These findings provide important characteristics of the fibrin(ogen) nanomechanics necessary to understand the molecular origins of fibrin viscoelasticity at the fiber and whole clot levels

    Model predictions of deformation, embolization and permeability of partially obstructive blood clots under variable shear flow

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    Thromboembolism, one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, is characterized by formation of obstructive intravascular clots (thrombi) and their mechanical breakage (embolization). A novel two-dimensional multi-phase computational model is introduced that describes active interactions between the main components of the clot, including platelets and fibrin, to study the impact of various physiologically relevant blood shear flow conditions on deformation and embolization of a partially obstructive clot with variable permeability. Simulations provide new insights into mechanisms underlying clot stability and embolization that cannot be studied experimentally at this time. In particular, model simulations, calibrated using experimental intravital imaging of an established arteriolar clot, show that flow-induced changes in size, shape and internal structure of the clot are largely determined by two shear-dependent mechanisms: reversible attachment of platelets to the exterior of the clot and removal of large clot pieces. Model simulations predict that blood clots with higher permeability are more prone to embolization with enhanced disintegration under increasing shear rate. In contrast, less permeable clots are more resistant to rupture due to shear rate-dependent clot stiffening originating from enhanced platelet adhesion and aggregation. These results can be used in future to predict risk of thromboembolism based on the data about composition, permeability and deformability of a clot under specific local haemodynamic conditions

    Direct Evidence for Specific Interactions of the Fibrinogen αC-Domains with the Central E Region and with Each Other †

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    The carboxyl-terminal regions of the fibrinogen Aα chains (αC regions) form compact αC-domains tethered to the bulk of the molecule with flexible αC-connectors. It was hypothesized that in fibrinogen two αC-domains interact intramolecularly with each other and with the central E region preferentially through its N-termini of Bβ chains, and that removal of fibrinopeptides A and B upon fibrin assembly results in dissociation of the αC regions and their switch to intermolecular interactions. To test this hypothesis, we studied the interactions of the recombinant αC region (Aα221-610 fragment) and its sub-fragments, αC-connector (Aα221-391) and αC-domain (Aα392-610), between each other and with the recombinant (Bβ1-66)2 and (β15-66)2 fragments and NDSK corresponding to the fibrin(ogen) central E region, using laser tweezers-based force spectroscopy. TheαC-domain, but not the αC-connector, bound to NDSK, which contains fibrinopeptides A and B, and less frequently to desA-NDSK and (Bβ1-66)2 containing only fibrinopeptides B; it was poorly reactive with desAB-NDSK and (β15-66)2 both lacking fibrinopeptides B. The interactions of the αC-domains with each other and with the αC-connector were also observed, although they were weaker and heterogeneous in strength. These results provide the first direct evidence for the interaction between the αC-domains and the central E region through fibrinopeptides B, in agreement with the above hypothesis, and indicate that fibrinopeptides A are also involved. They also confirm the hypothesized homomeric interactions between the αC-domains and display their interaction with the αC-connectors, which may contribute to covalent cross-linking of α polymers in fibrin
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