AbstractCollagen fibrils are nanostructured biological cables essential to the structural integrity of many of our tissues. Consequently, understanding the structural basis of their robust mechanical properties is of great interest. Here we present what to our knowledge is a novel mode of collagen fibril disruption that provides new insights into both the structure and mechanics of native collagen fibrils. Using enzyme probes for denatured collagen and scanning electron microscopy, we show that mechanically overloading collagen fibrils from bovine tail tendons causes them to undergo a sequential, two-stage, selective molecular failure process. Denatured collagen molecules—meaning molecules with a reduced degree of time-averaged helicity com...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
AbstractThe formation of collagen fibers from staggered subfibrils still lacks a universally accepte...
AbstractCollagen fibrils are nanostructured biological cables essential to the structural integrity ...
Collagenous tissues, made of collagen molecules, such as tendon and bone, are intriguing materials t...
Collagen constitutes one third of the human proteome, providing mechanical stability, elasticity and...
Collagen is a ubiquitous protein with remarkable mechanical properties. It is highly elastic, shows ...
Collagenous tissues, made of collagen molecules, such as tendon and bone, are intriguing materials t...
AbstractTendons are important load-bearing structures, which are frequently injured in both sports a...
Collagen constitutes one third of the human proteome, providing mechanical stability, elasticity and...
Collagen constitutes one-third of the human proteome, providing mechanical stability, elasticity, an...
AbstractCollagen fibrils play an important role in the human body, providing tensile strength to con...
AbstractCollagen is a ubiquitous protein with remarkable mechanical properties. It is highly elastic...
AbstractThis study investigates how the collagen fiber structure influences the enzymatic degradatio...
The collagen molecule, which is the building block of collagen fibrils, is a triple helix of two ?1(...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
AbstractThe formation of collagen fibers from staggered subfibrils still lacks a universally accepte...
AbstractCollagen fibrils are nanostructured biological cables essential to the structural integrity ...
Collagenous tissues, made of collagen molecules, such as tendon and bone, are intriguing materials t...
Collagen constitutes one third of the human proteome, providing mechanical stability, elasticity and...
Collagen is a ubiquitous protein with remarkable mechanical properties. It is highly elastic, shows ...
Collagenous tissues, made of collagen molecules, such as tendon and bone, are intriguing materials t...
AbstractTendons are important load-bearing structures, which are frequently injured in both sports a...
Collagen constitutes one third of the human proteome, providing mechanical stability, elasticity and...
Collagen constitutes one-third of the human proteome, providing mechanical stability, elasticity, an...
AbstractCollagen fibrils play an important role in the human body, providing tensile strength to con...
AbstractCollagen is a ubiquitous protein with remarkable mechanical properties. It is highly elastic...
AbstractThis study investigates how the collagen fiber structure influences the enzymatic degradatio...
The collagen molecule, which is the building block of collagen fibrils, is a triple helix of two ?1(...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
Type I collagen is the predominant collagen in mature tendons and ligaments, where it gives them the...
AbstractThe formation of collagen fibers from staggered subfibrils still lacks a universally accepte...