Effects of Hyaluronan Molecular Weight on the Lubrication of Cartilage-Emulating Boundary Layers

被引:33
|
作者
Liu, Zhang [1 ,2 ]
Lin, Weifeng [1 ]
Fan, Yaxun [2 ]
Kampf, Nir [1 ]
Wang, Yilin [2 ]
Klein, Jacob [1 ]
机构
[1] Weizmann Inst Sci, Dept Mat & Interfaces, IL-76100 Rehovot, Israel
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Chem, Key Lab Colloid & Interface Sci, Beijing Natl Lab Mol Sci BNLMS, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China
基金
欧洲研究理事会; 以色列科学基金会;
关键词
SYNOVIAL JOINT; LOW-FRICTION; ACID; OSTEOARTHRITIS; FORCES; VISCOSUPPLEMENTATION; FLUID; MECHANISMS; SURFACES; EFFICACY;
D O I
10.1021/acs.biomac.0c01151
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Osteoarthritic joints contain lower-molecular-weight (MW) hyaluronan (hyaluronic acid, HA) than healthy joints. To understand the relevance of this HA size effect for joint lubrication, the friction and surface structure of cartilage-emulating surfaces with HA of different MWs were studied using a surface force balance (SFB) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Gelatin (gel)-covered mica surfaces were coated with high-MW HA (HHA), medium-MW HA (MHA), or low-MW HA (LHA), and lipids of hydrogenated soy L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (HSPC) in the form of small unilamellar vesides, using a layer-by-layer assembly method. SFB results indicate that the gel-HHA-HSPC boundary layer provides very efficient lubrication, attributed to hydration lubrication at the phosphocholine headgroups exposed by the HA-attached lipids, with friction coefficients (COF) as low as 10(-3) - 10(-4) at contact stresses at least up to P = 120 atm. However, for the gel-MHA-HSPC and gel-LHA-HSPC surfaces, the friction, initially low, increases sharply at much lower pressures (up to 30-60 atm at most). This higher friction with the shorter chains may be due to their weaker total adhesion energy to the gelatin, where the attraction between the negatively charged HA and the weakly positively charged gelatin is attributed largely to counterion-release entropy. Thus, the complexes of LHA and MHA with the lubricating HSPC lipids are more easily removed by shear during sliding, especially at high stresses, than the HHA-HSPC complex, which is strongly adhered to gelatin. This is ultimately the reason for lower-pressure lubrication breakdown with the shorter polysaccharides. Our results provide molecular-level insight into why the decrease in HA molecular weight in osteoarthritic joints may be associated with higher friction at the articular cartilage surface, and may have relevance for treatments of osteoarthritis involving intra-articular HA injections.
引用
收藏
页码:4345 / 4354
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Effects of different molecular weight elastoviscous hyaluronan solutions on articular nociceptive afferents
    Gomis, A
    Pawlak, M
    Balazs, EA
    Schmidt, RF
    Belmonte, C
    ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM, 2004, 50 (01): : 314 - 326
  • [22] Therapeutic effects of high molecular weight hyaluronan injections for tendinopathy in a rat model
    Yoshida, Mamoru
    Funasaki, Hiroki
    Kubota, Makoto
    Marumo, Keishi
    JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC SCIENCE, 2015, 20 (01) : 186 - 195
  • [23] Effects of inhaled high-molecular weight hyaluronan in inflammatory airway disease
    Lamas, Adelaida
    Marshburn, Jamie
    Stober, Vandy P.
    Donaldson, Scott H.
    Garantziotis, Stavros
    RESPIRATORY RESEARCH, 2016, 17
  • [24] Both Hyaluronan and Collagen Type II Keep Proteoglycan 4 (Lubricin) at the Cartilage Surface in a Condition That Provides Low Friction during Boundary Lubrication
    Majd, Sara Ehsani
    Kuijer, Roel
    Koewitsch, Alexander
    Groth, Thomas
    Schmidt, Tannin A.
    Sharma, Prashant K.
    LANGMUIR, 2014, 30 (48) : 14566 - 14572
  • [25] Effects of Nanoscale Surface Texture and Lubricant Molecular Structure on Boundary Lubrication in Liquid
    Al-Azizi, Ala' A.
    Eryilmaz, Osman
    Erdemir, Ali
    Kim, Seong H.
    LANGMUIR, 2013, 29 (44) : 13419 - 13426
  • [26] Proteoglycan-4 and hyaluronan composition in synovial fluid and serum from clinical equine subjects: relationship to cartilage boundary lubrication and viscosity of synovial fluid
    Matheson, Austyn
    Regmi, Suresh C.
    Martin-Alarcon, Leonardo
    Jay, Gregory D.
    Scott, W. Michael
    Schmidt, Tannin A.
    CONNECTIVE TISSUE RESEARCH, 2021, 62 (04) : 369 - 380
  • [27] Hyaluronan molecular weight: Effects on dissolution time of dissolving microneedles in the skin and on immunogenicity of antigen
    Leone, Mara
    Romeijn, Stefan
    Slutter, Bram
    O'Mahony, Conor
    Kersten, Gideon
    Bouwstra, Joke A.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES, 2020, 146
  • [28] EFFECTS OF HIGH MOLECULAR WEIGHT HYALURONAN ON SHEEP EMBRYO DEVELOPMENT AND SURVIVAL AFTER CRYOPRESERVATION
    Ghaffarilaleh, V.
    Ghafari, F.
    Teresa-Paramio, M.
    Fouladi-Nashta, A.
    REPRODUCTION FERTILITY AND DEVELOPMENT, 2013, 25 (01) : 213 - 213
  • [29] Effects of oxygen-derived free radicals on the molecular weight and the polydispersity of hyaluronan solutions
    Praest, BM
    Greiling, H
    Kock, R
    CARBOHYDRATE RESEARCH, 1997, 303 (02) : 153 - 157
  • [30] Effects of high molecular weight hyaluronan on chondrocytes cultured within a resorbable gelatin sponge
    Goodstone, NJ
    Cartwright, A
    Ashton, B
    TISSUE ENGINEERING, 2004, 10 (3-4): : 621 - 631