Fibrin and Blood Clotting
Material
Properties of Fibrin
Collaborators: Martin Guthold
(Wake Forest Physics), Susan Lord (Pathology), Jennifer Mullin, Dorothy
Erie (Chemistry).
This collaboration uses the nanoManipulator
core project. It will also make use of the Mixture
of Model and Experiment core project to extract curvature and coverage
information.
Overview: Fibrin fibers are
the major structural component of blood clots. Determining the mechanical
properties of these fibers will provide new insights into the wound healing
process and will advance our understanding of heart attacks and strokes.
We are measuring the rupture force and other mechanical properties of
individual fibrin fibers (Fig. FB1). The nanoManipulator interface is
used to locate the desired modification site, and its polyline virtual
tip is used to effect the modification. Images of two manipulations of
these fibers are shown in the figure below: (A) & (B) and (D) &
(E). (A) and (D) show the fibers before the manipulation during which
a lateral force was applied to the fiber until it ruptured. Images (B)
and (E) depict the fiber after the manipulation and (C) and (F) show the
respective lateral force traces that were recorded during the manipula-tions.
The lateral force traces show two steps and
two peaks. The two steps are due to a reversal in the direction of tip
travel (i.e., from left to right and then from right to left) and correspond
to the friction between the substrate and the tip. They are not of interest
in the current study. However, the two peaks in the lateral force traces,
a common feature in the measurements of all ~30 fibers, yield some mechanical
properties of fibrin.

Manipulation of fibrin: (A-C)
Manipulation of fibrin fiber 1, ambient condition (diameter: 150nm).
Fibrin before (A) and after (B) manipulation. (C) Lateral force trace
for manipulation of fiber 1. (D-F) Manipulation of fibrin fiber 2, ambient
conditions (diameter: 180nm). Fibrin before (D) and after (E) manipulation.
The fiber moved back towards its original location, indicative of an
elastic deformation. (F) Lateral force trace for manipulation of fiber
2. (G) Rupture force vs. diameter of fiber (logarithmic scale). The
deduced exponent is about 1.4. (H) Fibrin fibers on grid surface imaged
in buffer. Scale bar in all images is 1 mm.
By comparing the images with the lateral
force traces one can see that the first peak occurs when the tip contacts
the fiber and partially detaches it from the surface. As the tip continues
its travel, the fiber becomes taut again and is being stretched out. At
this point, the force again increases rapidly until the rupture point.
From such curves the rupture force of human fibrin was determined.
Furthermore, the manipulation depicted in
(D) and (E) suggests that the deformation in the fibrin fiber is (at least
partially) elastic. The fiber was initially bent further than the bend
that is seen in image (E). In fact, it had been bent all the way to the
end of the scratch that is left by the tip in the surface (image (E),
arrow). The fiber moved back towards its straight configuration due to
a restoring force. Such behavior indicates that the bending of the fiber
was elastic (possibly in addition to a permanent plastic deformation).
The dependence of the rupture force on the
diameter of the fiber (using logarithmic axis) is shown in (G). The rupture
force increases proportional to R^1.4. The image in (H) shows fibrin fibers
that were deposited onto a silicon grid (1mm troughs and 2mm wide and
100nm tall ridges) and imaged in buffer (10mM CaCl2, 130mM NaCl, 20mM
Hepes, pH 7.4). The goal is to have fibers spanned over the troughs, so
that the surface does not interfere with measurements on the fibers. [Guthold2000b]
Update:
Our combination of a fluorescence optical microscope and an atomic force
microscope allows the simultaneous application of forces while imaging
the structure of a biological specimen in liquid. The nanoManipulator
allows us to easily measure the mechanical properties such as stiffness
and breaking strain in samples such as fibrin fibers. We have created
surfaces with ridges that allow the fibrin fibers to lay across a trough
in the surface, with 10 microns of the fiber suspended in the liquid.
With the ends of the fiber attached at either end to the substrate, the
AFM tip can be moved through the fiber to stretch and finally break the
fiber. The simultaneous imaging of the fiber during stretching allows
the measurement of the strain of the fiber. We label the fibrin fiber
with quantum dots that act as fluorescent labels to make the fiber visible
in the microscope. Imaging of the individual quantum dots labeling the
fiber will allow the tracking of strain with the potential for detecting
the stretching of individual fibrin proteins within the 100nm diameter
fiber.

At left, a labeled
fibrin fiber is imaged lying suspended in fluid, attached to the structured
substrate “hills”. (Right) Fibrin fiber, labeled with quantum
dot fluorescence markers, is stretched to over 350% without breaking.
Tracking of the discrete markers will allow us to measure internal strains.
References: Guthold,
M., W. Liu, B. Stephens, S. T. Lord, R. R. Hantgan, D. A. Erie, R. M.
Taylor II and R. Superfine (2004). "Visualization and Mechanical
Manipulations of Individual Fibrin Fibers." Biophys. J. 87(6): 4226-4236
W. Liu,, Jawerth, L., M. Falvo, R. Superfine, S. Lord, M. Guthold, “Extensibility
of Fibrin Fibers.” (Submitted.)
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