Partner: Prof. F.C. MacKintosh, PhD

Vrije Universiteit (NL)

Supervision of doctoral theses
1.2011-11-23
co-supervisor
Piechocka Izabela  
(Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam)
Biopolymers: from structural hierarchy to nonlinear rheology 

Recent publications
1.Piechocka I.K., Jansen K.A., Broedersz C.P., Kurniawan N.A., MacKintosh F.C., Koenderink G.H., Multi-scale strain-stiffening of semiflexible bundle networks, SOFT MATTER, ISSN: 1744-683X, DOI: 10.1039/c5sm01992c, Vol.12, No.7, pp.2145-2156, 2016
Abstract:

Bundles of polymer filaments are responsible for the rich and unique mechanical behaviors of many biomaterials, including cells and extracellular matrices. In fibrin biopolymers, whose nonlinear elastic properties are crucial for normal blood clotting, protofibrils self-assemble and bundle to form networks of semiflexible fibers. Here we show that the extraordinary strain-stiffening response of fibrin networks is a direct reflection of the hierarchical architecture of the fibrin fibers. We measure the rheology of networks of unbundled protofibrils and find excellent agreement with an affine model of extensible wormlike polymers. By direct comparison with these data, we show that physiological fibrin networks composed of thick fibers can be modeled as networks of tight protofibril bundles. We demonstrate that the tightness of coupling between protofibrils in the fibers can be tuned by the degree of enzymatic intermolecular crosslinking by the coagulation factor XIII. Furthermore, at high stress, the protofibrils contribute independently to the network elasticity, which may reflect a decoupling of the tight bundle structure. The hierarchical architecture of fibrin fibers can thus account for the nonlinearity and enormous elastic resilience characteristic of blood clots.

Affiliations:
Piechocka I.K.-other affiliation
Jansen K.A.-FOM Institute AMOLF (NL)
Broedersz C.P.-Princeton University (US)
Kurniawan N.A.-Eindhoven University of Technology (NL)
MacKintosh F.C.-Vrije Universiteit (NL)
Koenderink G.H.-FOM Institute AMOLF (NL)
2.Piechocka I.K., Bacabac R.G., Potters M., MacKintosh F.C., Koenderink G.H., Structural Hierarchy Governs Fibrin Gel Mechanics, BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, ISSN: 0006-3495, DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.040, Vol.98, No.10, pp.2281-2289, 2010
Abstract:

Fibrin gels are responsible for the mechanical strength of blood clots, which are among the most resilient protein materials in nature. Here we investigate the physical origin of this mechanical behavior by performing rheology measurements on reconstituted fibrin gels. We find that increasing levels of shear strain induce a succession of distinct elastic responses that reflect stretching processes on different length scales. We present a theoretical model that explains these observations in terms of the unique hierarchical architecture of the fibers. The fibers are bundles of semiflexible protofibrils that are loosely connected by flexible linker chains. This architecture makes the fibers 100-fold more flexible to bending than anticipated based on their large diameter. Moreover, in contrast with other biopolymers, fibrin fibers intrinsically stiffen when stretched. The resulting hierarchy of elastic regimes explains the incredible resilience of fibrin clots against large deformations.

Affiliations:
Piechocka I.K.-other affiliation
Bacabac R.G.-FOM Institute AMOLF (NL)
Potters M.-Vrije Universiteit (NL)
MacKintosh F.C.-Vrije Universiteit (NL)
Koenderink G.H.-FOM Institute AMOLF (NL)