Abstract

Microtubule bundles cross-linked by tau protein serve a variety of neurological functions including maintaining mechanical integrity of the axon, promoting axonal growth, and facilitating cargo transport. It has been observed that axonal damage in traumatic brain injury leads to bundle disorientation, loss of axonal viability, and cognitive impairment. This study investigates the initial mechanical response of axonal microtubule bundles under uniaxial tension using a discrete bead-spring representation. Mechanisms of failure due to traumatic stretch loading and their impact on the mechanical response and stability are also characterized. This study indicates that cross-linked axonal microtubule bundles in tension display stiffening behavior similar to a power-law relationship from nonaffine network deformations. Stretching of cross-links and microtubule bending were the primary deformation modes at low stresses. Microtubule stretch was negligible up to tensile stresses of ∼1 MPa. Bundle failure occurred by failure of cross-links leading to pull-out of microtubules and loss of bundle integrity. This may explain the elongation, undulation, and delayed elasticity of axons following traumatic stretch loading. More extensively cross-linked bundles withstood higher tensile stresses before failing. The bundle mechanical behavior uncovered by these computational techniques should guide future experiments on stretch-injured axons.

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