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Dive into the research topics where Ozan Akkus is active.

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Featured researches published by Ozan Akkus.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2003

Aging of microstructural compartments in human compact bone

Ozan Akkus; Anna Polyakova-Akkus; Fran Adar; Mitchell B. Schaffler

Composition of microstructural compartments in compact bone of aging male subjects was assessed using Raman microscopy. Secondary mineralization of unremodeled fragments persisted for two decades. Replacement of these tissue fragments with secondary osteons kept mean composition constant over age, but at a fully mineralized limit. Slowing of remodeling may increase fracture susceptibility through an increase in proportion of highly mineralized tissue.


Biomaterials | 2008

An electrochemical fabrication process for the assembly of anisotropically oriented collagen bundles

Xingguo Cheng; Umut A. Gurkan; Christopher J. Dehen; Michael P. Tate; Hugh W. Hillhouse; Garth J. Simpson; Ozan Akkus

Controlled assembly of collagen molecules in vitro remains a major challenge for fabricating the next generation of engineered tissues. Here we present a novel electrochemical alignment technique to control the assembly of type-I collagen molecules into highly oriented and densely packed elongated bundles at the macroscale. The process involves application of electric currents to collagen solutions which in turn generate a pH gradient. Through an isoelectric focusing process, the molecules migrate and congregate within a plane. It was possible to fabricate collagen bundles with 50-400 microm diameter and several inches length via this process. The current study assessed the orientational order, and the presence of fibrillar assembly in such electrochemically oriented constructs by polarized optical microscopy, small angle X-ray scattering, second harmonic generation, and electron microscopy. The mechanical strength of the aligned crosslinked collagen bundles was 30-fold greater than its randomly oriented-crosslinked counterpart. Aligned crosslinked collagen bundles had about half the strength of the native tendon. Tendon-derived fibroblast cells were able to migrate and populate multiple macroscopic bundles at a rate of 0.5mm/day. The anisotropic order within biocompatible collagenous constructs was conferred upon the nuclear morphology of cells as well. These results indicate that the electrochemically oriented collagen scaffolds carry baseline characteristics to be considered for tendon/ligament repair.


Bone | 2008

The associations between mineral crystallinity and the mechanical properties of human cortical bone

Janardhan Yerramshetty; Ozan Akkus

It is well known that the amount of mineralization renders bone its stiffness. However, besides the mere amount of the mineral phase, size and shape of carbonated apatite crystals are postulated to affect the mechanical properties of bone tissue as predicted by composite mechanics models. Despite this predictive evidence, there is little experimental insight on the relation between the characteristics of mineral crystals and hard tissue mechanics. In this study, Raman spectroscopy was used to provide information on the crystallinity of bones mineral phase, a parameter which is an overall indicator of mineral crystal size and stoichiometric perfection. Raman scans and mechanical tests (monotonic and fatigue; n=64 each) were performed on the anterior, medial, lateral and posterior quadrant sections of 16 human cadaveric femurs (52 y.o.-85 y.o.). The reported coefficient of determination values (R(2)) were adjusted for the effects of age to bring out the unbiased contribution of crystallinity. Crystallinity was able to explain 6.7% to 48.3% of the variation in monotonic mechanical properties. Results indicated that the tissue-level strength and stiffness increased with increasing crystallinity while the ductility reduced. Crystallinity explained 11.3% to 63.5% of the variation in fatigue properties. Moduli of specimens with greater crystallinity degraded at a slower rate and, also, they had longer fatigue lives. However, not every anatomical quadrant displayed these relationships. In conclusion, these results acknowledge crystal properties as an important bone quality factor and raise the possibility that aberrations in these properties may contribute to senile osteoporotic fractures.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2001

Fracture resistance of gamma radiation sterilized cortical bone allografts

Ozan Akkus; Clare M. Rimnac

Gamma radiation is widely used for sterilization of human cortical bone allografts. Previous studies have reported that cortical bone becomes brittle due to gamma radiation sterilization. This embrittlement raises concern about the performance of a radiation sterilized allograft in the presence of a stress concentration that might be surgically introduced or biologically induced. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of gamma radiation sterilization on the fracture resistance of human femoral cortical bone in the presence of a stress concentration. Fracture toughness tests of specimens sterilized at a dose of 27.5 kGy and control specimens were conducted transverse and longitudinal to the osteonal orientation of the bone tissue. The formation of damage was monitored with acoustic emission (AE) during testing and was histologically observed following testing. There was a significant decrease in fracture toughness due to irradiation in both crack growth directions. The work‐to‐fracture was also significantly reduced. It was observed that the ability of bone tissue to undergo damage in the form of microcracks and diffuse damage was significantly impaired due to radiation sterilization as evidenced by decreased AE activity and histological observations. The results of this study suggest that, for cortical bone irradiated at 27.5 kGy, it is easier to initiate and propagate a macrocrack from a stress concentration due to the inhibition of damage formation at and near the crack tip.


Biomaterials | 2012

Tenogenic differentiation of human MSCs induced by the topography of electrochemically aligned collagen threads

Vipuil Kishore; Whitney Bullock; Xuanhao Sun; William S. Van Dyke; Ozan Akkus

Topographical cues from the extracellular microenvironment can influence cellular activity including proliferation and differentiation. Information on the effects of material topography on tenogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells (human MSCs) is limited. A methodology using the principles of isoelectric focusing has previously been developed in our laboratory to synthesize electrochemically aligned collagen (ELAC) threads that mimics the packing density, alignment and strength of collagen dense connective tissues. In the current study, human MSCs were cultured on ELAC and randomly oriented collagen threads and the effect of collagen orientation on cell morphology, proliferation and tenogenic differentiation was investigated. The results indicate that higher rates of proliferation were observed on randomly oriented collagen threads compared to ELAC threads. On the other hand, tendon specific markers such as scleraxis and tenomodulin, were significantly increased on ELAC threads compared to randomly oriented collagen threads. Additionally, osteocalcin, a specific marker of bone differentiation was suppressed on ELAC threads. Previous studies have reported that BMP-12 is a key growth factor to induce tenogenic differentiation of MSCs. To evaluate the synergistic effect of BMP-12 and collagen orientation, human MSCs were cultured on ELAC threads in culture medium supplemented with and without BMP-12. The results revealed that BMP-12 did not have an additional effect on the tenogenic differentiation of human MSCs on ELAC threads. Together, these results suggest that ELAC induces tenogenic differentiation of human MSCs by presenting an aligned and dense collagen substrate, akin to the tendon itself. In conclusion, ELAC has a significant potential to be used as a tendon replacement and in the development of an osteotendinous construct towards the regeneration of bone-tendon interfaces.


Mammalian Genome | 2003

Hierarchical relationship between bone traits and mechanical properties in inbred mice.

Karl J. Jepsen; Ozan Akkus; Joseph H. Nadeau

Osteoporotic fracture incidence and underlying risk factors like low peak bone mass are heritable, but the genetic basis of osteoporosis remains poorly understood. Based on beam theory, stating that mechanical properties of a structure depend on both the amount and quality of the constituent materials, we investigated the relationship between whole bone mechanical properties and a set of morphological and compositional traits in femurs of eight inbred mouse strains. K-means cluster analysis revealed that individual femora could be classified reliably according to genotype based on the combination of bone area (tissue amount), moment of inertia (tissue distribution), and ash content (tissue quality). This trait combination explained 66–88% of the inter-strain variability in four whole-bone mechanical properties that describe all aspects of the failure process, including measures of brittleness. Stiffness and maximum load were functionally associated with cortical area, while measures of brittleness were associated with ash content. In contrast, work-to-failure was not directly related to a single trait but depended on a combination of trait magnitudes. From these findings, which were entirely consistent with established mechanical theory, we developed a hierarchical paradigm relating the mechanical properties that define bone fragility with readily measurable phenotypic traits that exhibit strong heritability. This paradigm will help guide the search for genes that underlie fracture susceptibility and osteoporosis. Moreover, because the traits we examined are measurable with non-invasive means, this approach may also prove directly applicable to osteoporosis risk assessment.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2001

Cortical bone tissue resists fatigue fracture by deceleration and arrest of microcrack growth

Ozan Akkus; Clare M. Rimnac

Knowledge of kinetics of fatigue crack growth of microcracks is important so as to understand the dynamics of bone adaptation, remodeling, and the etiology of fatigue-based failures of cortical bone tissue. In this respect, theoretical models (Taylor, J. Biomech., 31 (1998) 587-592; Taylor and Prendergast, Proc. Instn. Mech. Engrs. Part H 211 (1997) 369-375) of microcrack growth in cortical bone have predicted a decreasing microcrack growth rate with increasing microcrack length. However, these predictions have not been observed directly. This study investigated microcrack growth and arrest through observations of surface microcracks during cyclic loading (R=0.1, 50-80MPa) of human femoral cortical bone (male, n=4, age range: 37-40yr) utilizing a video microscopy system. The change in crack length and orientation of eight surface microcracks were measured with the number of fatigue cycles from four specimens. At the applied cyclic stresses, the microcracks propagated and arrested in generally less than 10,000 cycles. The fatigue crack growth rate of all microcracks decreased with increasing crack length following initial identification, consistent with theoretical predictions. The growth rate of the microcracks was observed to be in the range of 5x10(-5) to 5x10(-7)mmcycle(-1). In addition, many of the microcracks were observed not to grow beyond 150 microm and a cyclic stress intensity factor of 0.5MNm(-3/2). The results of this study suggest that cortical bone tissue may resist fracture at the microscale by deceleration of fatigue crack growth and arrest of microcracks.


Optics Letters | 2010

Random lasing in bone tissue

Qinghai Song; Shumin Xiao; Zhengbin Xu; Jingjing Liu; Xuanhao Sun; Vladimir P. Drachev; Vladimir M. Shalaev; Ozan Akkus; Young L. Kim

Owing to the low-loss and high refractive index variations derived from the basic building block of bone structure, we, for the first time to our knowledge, demonstrate coherent random lasing action originated from the bone structure infiltrated with laser dye, revealing that bone tissue is an ideal biological material for random lasing. Our numerical simulation shows that random lasers are extremely sensitive to subtle structural changes even at nanoscales and can potentially be an excellent tool for probing nanoscale structural alterations in real time as a novel spectroscopic modality.


Macromolecular Bioscience | 2012

Physically crosslinked nanocomposites from silicate-crosslinked PEO: mechanical properties and osteogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells.

Akhilesh K. Gaharwar; Vipuil Kishore; Christian Rivera; Whitney Bullock; Chia Jung Wu; Ozan Akkus; Gudrun Schmidt

The mechanical and biological properties of silicate-crosslinked PEO nanocomposites are studied. A strong correlation is observed between silicate concentration and mechanical properties. In vitro cell culture studies reveal that an increase in silicate concentration enhances the attachment and proliferation of human mesenchymal stem cells significantly. An upregulation in the expression of osteocalcin on nanocomposites compared to the tissue culture polystyrene control is observed. Together, these results suggest that silicate-based nanocomposites are bioactive and have the potential to be used in a range of biotechnological and biomedical applications such as injectable matrices, biomedical coatings, drug delivery, and regenerative medicine.


Calcified Tissue International | 2006

Effect of Fixation and Embedding on Raman Spectroscopic Analysis of Bone Tissue

Yener N. Yeni; Janardhan Yerramshetty; Ozan Akkus; C. Pechey; C.M. Les

Raman spectroscopy provides valuable information on the physicochemical properties of hard tissues. While the technique can analyze tissues in their native state, analysis of fixed, embedded, and sectioned specimens may be necessary on certain occasions. The information on the effects of fixatives and embedding media on Raman spectral properties is limited. We examined the effect of ethanol and glycerol as fixatives and a variety of embedding media (Araldite, Eponate, Technovit, glycol methacrylate, polymethyl methacrylate, and LR white) on Raman spectral properties (mineralization, crystallinity, and carbonation) measured from the cortical bone of mouse humeri. Humeri were fixed in ethanol or glycerol, followed by embedding in one of the media. Nonfixed, freeze-dried, and fixed but not embedded sections were also examined. Periosteal, endosteal, and midosteal regions of the intracortical envelope were analyzed. Raman spectra of fixative solutions and embedding media were also recorded separately in order to examine the specifics of overlap between spectra. We found significant effects of fixation, embedding, and anatomical location on Raman spectral properties. The interference of ethanol with tissue seemed to be relatively less pronounced than that of glycerol. However, there was no single combination of fixation and embedding that left Raman spectral parameters unaltered. We conclude that careful selection of a fixation and embedding combination should be made based on the parameter of interest and the type of tissue. It may be necessary to process multiple samples from the tissue, each using a combination appropriate for the Raman parameter in question.

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Vipuil Kishore

Case Western Reserve University

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Mousa Younesi

Case Western Reserve University

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Umut A. Gurkan

Case Western Reserve University

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Mustafa Unal

Case Western Reserve University

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Anowarul Islam

Case Western Reserve University

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Renato Roperto

Case Western Reserve University

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Nuri Akkas

Middle East Technical University

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