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Mechanical anisotropy of hair affected by genetic diseases highlights structural information related to differential crosslinking in keratins.

Steven BreakspearBernd NoeckerCrisan Popescu
Published in: European biophysics journal : EBJ (2023)
Previous work with Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) nanoindentation, on longitudinal and cross-sections of the human hair fibre, allowed for the derivation of a model for the mechanical behaviour of human hair, called the Anisotropic Index. Expanding that research further, and by applying this model, the nanomechanical behaviour of hairs from patients with the disease Trichothiodystrophy (TTD) has been examined and structural insights, gained from combining the AFM results with Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) experiments and tensile measurements, suggests that TTD-affected hairs have a relatively increased amount of Keratin Intermediate Filaments, contained in compartments of differing crosslinking extent. The associated calculations of axial and transverse Young's Moduli deliver values in good agreement with the measured fibre mechanics. Furthermore, comparing these findings with the results previously obtained from the study of hairs from patients with the disease Monilethrix, it is shown that the Anisotropic Index correlates well with the known deficiencies in both hair types obtained from such patients and allows for discerning between the Control hair and from those affected by the two diseases. AFM nanoindentation along and across the fibre axis and the Anisotropic Index thus appear to reveal structural details of hair not otherwise acquirable, whilst DSC may offer a quick and simple method for distinguishing between different severities of TTD.
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