The fibrillar architecture in the general matrix of softened
cartilage has been compared with that of the
normal matrix using both Nomarski light microscopy and transmission
electron microscopy with combined
stereoscopic reconstruction. A pseudorandom network developed from an
overall radial arrangement of
collagen fibrils is the most fundamental ultrastructural characteristic
of the normal general matrix. This, in
turn, provides an efficient entrapment system for the swelling proteoglycans.
Conversely, the most distinctive
feature of the softened matrix is the presence of parallel and relatively
unentwined fibrils, strongly aligned in
the radial direction. The presence of an optically resolvable fibrous
texture in the softened cartilage matrix
indicates the presence of discrete bundles of closely packed and aligned
fibrils at the ultrastructural level of
organisation. The general absence of such texture in the normal cartilage
general matrix is consistent with
the much greater degree of interconnectedness and related short-range
obliquity in the fibrillar architecture,
hence the importance of the term pseudorandom network. A mechanism of
structural transformation is
proposed based on the important property of lateral interconnectivity
in the fibrils which involves both
entwinement and nonentwinement based interactions. The previously
reported difference in intrinsic
mechanical strength between the normal and softened matrices is consistent
with the transformation model proposed in this study.