Comparison of water, hydroxyproline, uronic acid and elastin contents of bovine knee ligaments and patellar tendon and their relationships with biomechanical properties

2020 
Abstract Mechanical material properties of ligaments originate from their biochemical composition and structural organization. However, it is not yet fully elucidated how biochemical contents vary between knee ligaments and patellar tendon (PT) and how they relate with mechanical properties. The purpose of this study was to compare water, collagen, proteoglycan and elastin contents between bovine knee ligaments and PT and correlate them with tensile material properties. Hydroxyproline (collagen), uronic acid (proteoglycan) and elastin contents per wet and dry weights were measured using colorimetric biochemical methods for bovine knee ligament and PT samples (n = 10 knees). Direct comparison and correlation with multiple linear regression were performed against biomechanical properties measured in our earlier study. Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and PT exhibited lower hydroxyproline content per wet weight compared with other ligaments (p  Differences between ligaments in biochemical composition highlight differences in their physiological function and loading regimes. As expected, collagen content showed similar trend with stiffness and strength. The predictive role of proteoglycan and elastin contents on the mechanical properties might indicate their important functional role in ligaments.
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