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1.
Langmuir ; 40(8): 4228-4235, 2024 02 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38357880

RESUMEN

Simple synthetic and natural hydrogels can be formulated to have elastic moduli that match biological tissues, leading to their widespread application as model systems for tissue engineering, medical device development, and drug delivery vehicles. However, two different hydrogels having the same elastic modulus but differing in microstructure or nanostructure can exhibit drastically different mechanical responses, including their poroelasticity, lubricity, and load bearing capabilities. Here, we investigate the mechanical response of collagen-1 networks to local and bulk compressive loads. We compare these results to the behavior of polyacrylamide, a fundamentally different class of hydrogel network consisting of flexible polymer chains. We find that the high bending rigidity of collagen fibers, which suppresses entropic bending fluctuations and osmotic pressure, facilitates the bulk compression of collagen networks under infinitesimal applied stress. These results are fundamentally different from the behavior of flexible polymer networks in which the entropic thermal fluctuations of the polymer chains result in an osmotic pressure that must first be overcome before bulk compression can occur. Furthermore, we observe minimal transverse strain during the axial loading of collagen networks, a behavior reminiscent of open-celled cellular solids. Inspired by these results, we applied mechanical models of cellular solids to predict the elastic moduli of the collagen networks and found agreement with the moduli values measured through contact indentation. Collectively, these results suggest that unlike flexible polymer networks that are often considered incompressible, collagen hydrogels behave like rigid porous solids that volumetrically compress and expel water rather than spreading laterally under applied normal loads.


Asunto(s)
Colágeno , Matriz Extracelular , Presión , Módulo de Elasticidad , Colágeno/química , Polímeros , Hidrogeles/química , Estrés Mecánico
2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(51): e202314531, 2023 Dec 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37931093

RESUMEN

Self-assembly of proteinaceous biomolecules into functional materials with ordered structures that span length scales is common in nature yet remains a challenge with designer peptides under ambient conditions. This report demonstrates how charged side-chain chemistry affects the hierarchical co-assembly of a family of charge-complementary ß-sheet-forming peptide pairs known as CATCH(X+/Y-) at physiologic pH and ionic strength in water. In a concentration-dependent manner, the CATCH(6K+) (Ac-KQKFKFKFKQK-Am) and CATCH(6D-) (Ac-DQDFDFDFDQD-Am) pair formed either ß-sheet-rich microspheres or ß-sheet-rich gels with a micron-scale plate-like morphology, which were not observed with other CATCH(X+/Y-) pairs. This hierarchical order was disrupted by replacing D with E, which increased fibril twisting. Replacing K with R, or mutating the N- and C-terminal amino acids in CATCH(6K+) and CATCH(6D-) to Qs, increased observed co-assembly kinetics, which also disrupted hierarchical order. Due to the ambient assembly conditions, active CATCH(6K+)-green fluorescent protein fusions could be incorporated into the ß-sheet plates and microspheres formed by the CATCH(6K+/6D-) pair, demonstrating the potential to endow functionality.


Asunto(s)
Péptidos , Conformación Proteica en Lámina beta , Péptidos/química , Geles
3.
Soft Matter ; 18(45): 8554-8560, 2022 Nov 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36350122

RESUMEN

In many tissues, cell type varies over single-cell length-scales, creating detailed heterogeneities fundamental to physiological function. To gain understanding of the relationship between tissue function and detailed structure, and eventually to engineer structurally and physiologically accurate tissues, we need the ability to assemble 3D cellular structures having the level of detail found in living tissue. Here we introduce a method of 3D cell assembly having a level of precision finer than the single-cell scale. With this method we create detailed cellular patterns, demonstrating that cell type can be varied over the single-cell scale and showing function after their assembly.

4.
Soft Matter ; 17(14): 3886-3894, 2021 Apr 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33683242

RESUMEN

Capillary forces acting at the interfaces of soft materials lead to deformations over the scale of the elastocapillary length. When surface stresses exceed a material's yield stress, a plastocapillary effect is expected to arise, resulting in yielding and plastic deformation. Here, we explore the interfacial instabilities of 3D-printed fluid and elastic beams embedded within viscoelastic fluids and elastic solid support materials. Interfacial instabilities are driven by the immiscibility between the paired phases or their solvents. We find that the stability of an embedded structure is predicted from the balance between the yield stress of the elastic solid, τy, the apparent interfacial tension between the materials, γ', and the radius of the beam, r, such that τy > γ'/r. When the capillary forces are sufficiently large, we observe yielding and failure of the 3D printed beams. Furthermore, we observe new coiling and buckling instabilities emerging when elastic beams are embedded within viscous fluid support materials. The coiling behavior appear analogous to elastic rope coiling whereas the buckling instability follows the scaling behavior predicted from Euler-Bernoulli beam theory.

5.
Soft Matter ; 16(28): 6684, 2020 Jul 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32639490

RESUMEN

Correction for '3D aggregation of cells in packed microgel media' by Cameron D. Morley et al., Soft Matter, 2020, DOI: 10.1039/d0sm00517g.

6.
Soft Matter ; 16(28): 6572-6581, 2020 Jul 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32589183

RESUMEN

In both natural and applied contexts, investigating cell self-assembly and aggregation within controlled 3D environments leads to improved understanding of how structured cell assemblies emerge, what determines their shapes and sizes, and whether their structural features are stable. However, the inherent limits of using solid scaffolding or liquid spheroid culture for this purpose restrict experimental freedom in studies of cell self-assembly. Here we investigate multi-cellular self-assembly using a 3D culture medium made from packed microgels as a bridge between the extremes of solid scaffolds and liquid culture. We find that cells dispersed at different volume fractions in this microgel-based 3D culture media aggregate into clusters of different sizes and shapes, forming large system-spanning networks at the highest cell densities. We find that the transitions between different states of assembly can be controlled by the level of cell-cell cohesion and by the yield stress of the packed microgel environment. Measurements of aggregate fractal dimension show that those with increased cell-cell cohesion are less sphere-like and more irregularly shaped, indicating that cell stickiness inhibits rearrangements in aggregates, in analogy to the assembly of colloids with strong cohesive bonds. Thus, the effective surface tension often expected to emerge from increased cell cohesion is suppressed in this type of cell self-assembly.


Asunto(s)
Microgeles , Coloides , Andamios del Tejido
7.
BMC Biol ; 17(1): 80, 2019 10 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31604443

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The ability to regenerate is a widely distributed but highly variable trait among metazoans. A variety of modes of regeneration has been described for different organisms; however, many questions regarding the origin and evolution of these strategies remain unanswered. Most species of ctenophore (or "comb jellies"), a clade of marine animals that branch off at the base of the animal tree of life, possess an outstanding capacity to regenerate. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying this ability are unknown. We have used the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi as a system to study wound healing and adult regeneration and provide some first-time insights of the cellular mechanisms involved in the regeneration of one of the most ancient extant group of multicellular animals. RESULTS: We show that cell proliferation is activated at the wound site and is indispensable for whole-body regeneration. Wound healing occurs normally in the absence of cell proliferation forming a scar-less wound epithelium. No blastema-like structure is generated at the cut site, and pulse-chase experiments and surgical intervention show that cells originating in the main regions of cell proliferation (the tentacle bulbs) do not seem to contribute to the formation of new structures after surgical challenge, suggesting a local source of cells during regeneration. While exposure to cell-proliferation blocking treatment inhibits regeneration, the ability to regenerate is recovered when the treatment ends (days after the original cut), suggesting that ctenophore regenerative capabilities are constantly ready to be triggered and they are somehow separable of the wound healing process. CONCLUSIONS: Ctenophore regeneration takes place through a process of cell proliferation-dependent non-blastemal-like regeneration and is temporally separable of the wound healing process. We propose that undifferentiated cells assume the correct location of missing structures and differentiate in place. The remarkable ability to replace missing tissue, the many favorable experimental features (e.g., optical clarity, high fecundity, rapid regenerative performance, stereotyped cell lineage, sequenced genome), and the early branching phylogenetic position in the animal tree, all point to the emergence of ctenophores as a new model system to study the evolution of animal regeneration.


Asunto(s)
Ctenóforos/fisiología , Regeneración , Cicatrización de Heridas , Animales , Tipificación del Cuerpo , Proliferación Celular , Modelos Biológicos
8.
Soft Matter ; 14(9): 1559-1570, 2018 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29450413

RESUMEN

Micro-scale hydrogel particles, known as microgels, are used in industry to control the rheology of numerous different products, and are also used in experimental research to study the origins of jamming and glassy behavior in soft-sphere model systems. At the macro-scale, the rheological behaviour of densely packed microgels has been thoroughly characterized; at the particle-scale, careful investigations of jamming, yielding, and glassy-dynamics have been performed through experiment, theory, and simulation. However, at low packing fractions near jamming, the connection between microgel yielding phenomena and the physics of their constituent polymer chains has not been made. Here we investigate whether basic polymer physics scaling laws predict macroscopic yielding behaviours in packed microgels. We measure the yield stress and cross-over shear-rate in several different anionic microgel systems prepared at packing fractions just above the jamming transition, and show that our data can be predicted from classic polyelectrolyte physics scaling laws. We find that diffusive relaxations of microgel deformation during particle re-arrangements can predict the shear-rate at which microgels yield, and the elastic stress associated with these particle deformations predict the yield stress.

9.
Biophys J ; 108(2): 247-50, 2015 Jan 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25606673

RESUMEN

Cells moving collectively in tissues constitute a form of active matter, in which collective motion depends strongly on driven fluctuations at the single-cell scale. Fluctuations in cell area and number density are often seen in monolayers, yet their role in collective migration is not known. Here we study density fluctuations at the single- and multicell level, finding that single-cell volumes oscillate with a timescale of 4 h and an amplitude of 20%; the timescale and amplitude are found to depend on cytoskeletal activity. At the multicellular scale, density fluctuations violate the central limit theorem, highlighting the role of nonequilibrium driving forces in multicellular density fluctuations.


Asunto(s)
Tamaño de la Célula , Análisis de Varianza , Animales , Movimiento Celular , Forma de la Célula , Perros , Células de Riñón Canino Madin Darby
10.
Eur Phys J E Soft Matter ; 38(2): 96, 2015 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25715951

RESUMEN

Blood vessels often have an undulatory morphology, with excessive bending, kinking, and coiling occuring in diseased vasculature. The underlying physical causes of these morphologies are generally attributed, in combination, to changes in blood pressure, blood flow rate, and cell proliferation or apoptosis. However, pathological vascular morphologies often start during developmental vasculogenesis. At early stages of vasculogenesis, angioblasts (vascular endothelial cells that have not formed a lumen) assemble into primitive vessel-like fibers before blood flow occurs. If loose, fibrous aggregates of endothelial cells can generate multi-cellular undulations through mechanical instabilities, driven by the cytoskeleton, new insight into vasculature morphology may be achieved with simple in vitro models of endothelial cell fibers. Here we study mechanical instabilities in vessel-like structures made from endothelial cells embedded in a collagen matrix. We find that endothelial cell fibers contract radially over time, and undulate at two dominant wavelengths: approximately 1cm and 1mm. Simple mechanical models suggest that the long-wavelength undulation is Euler buckling in rigid confinement, while the short-wavelength buckle may arise from a mismatch between fiber bending energy and matrix deformation. These results suggest a combination of fiber-like geometry, cystoskeletal contractions, and extracellular matrix elasticity may contribute to undulatory blood vessel morphology in the absence of a lumen or blood pressure.


Asunto(s)
Aorta/citología , Células Endoteliales/fisiología , Agregación Celular , Colágeno/farmacología , Elasticidad , Células Endoteliales/efectos de los fármacos , Matriz Extracelular/química , Humanos
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(4): 1116-21, 2012 Jan 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22232655

RESUMEN

Bacterial biofilms are organized communities of cells living in association with surfaces. The hallmark of biofilm formation is the secretion of a polymeric matrix rich in sugars and proteins in the extracellular space. In Bacillus subtilis, secretion of the exopolysaccharide (EPS) component of the extracellular matrix is genetically coupled to the inhibition of flagella-mediated motility. The onset of this switch results in slow expansion of the biofilm on a substrate. Different strains have radically different capabilities in surface colonization: Flagella-null strains spread at the same rate as wild type, while both are dramatically faster than EPS mutants. Multiple functions have been attributed to the EPS, but none of these provides a physical mechanism for generating spreading. We propose that the secretion of EPS drives surface motility by generating osmotic pressure gradients in the extracellular space. A simple mathematical model based on the physics of polymer solutions shows quantitative agreement with experimental measurements of biofilm growth, thickening, and spreading. We discuss the implications of this osmotically driven type of surface motility for nutrient uptake that may elucidate the reduced fitness of the matrix-deficient mutant strains.


Asunto(s)
Bacillus subtilis/crecimiento & desarrollo , Biopelículas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Movimiento/fisiología , Presión Osmótica/fisiología , Polisacáridos Bacterianos/metabolismo , Bacillus subtilis/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Imagen de Lapso de Tiempo
12.
Curr Opin Cell Biol ; 19(1): 101-7, 2007 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17174543

RESUMEN

To elucidate the dynamic and functional role of a cell within the tissue it belongs to, it is essential to understand its material properties. The cell is a viscoelastic material with highly unusual properties. Measurements of the mechanical behavior of cells are beginning to probe the contribution of constituent components to cell mechanics. Reconstituted cytoskeletal protein networks have been shown to mimic many aspects of the mechanical properties of cells, providing new insight into the origin of cellular behavior. These networks are highly nonlinear, with an elastic modulus that depends sensitively on applied stress. Theories can account for some of the measured properties, but a complete model remains elusive.


Asunto(s)
Fenómenos Fisiológicos Celulares , Citoesqueleto/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Animales , Anisotropía , Fenómenos Biomecánicos , Elasticidad , Reología , Viscosidad
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(12): 4714-9, 2011 Mar 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21321233

RESUMEN

Collective cell migration in tissues occurs throughout embryonic development, during wound healing, and in cancerous tumor invasion, yet most detailed knowledge of cell migration comes from single-cell studies. As single cells migrate, the shape of the cell body fluctuates dramatically through cyclic processes of extension, adhesion, and retraction, accompanied by erratic changes in migration direction. Within confluent cell layers, such subcellular motions must be coupled between neighbors, yet the influence of these subcellular motions on collective migration is not known. Here we study motion within a confluent epithelial cell sheet, simultaneously measuring collective migration and subcellular motions, covering a broad range of length scales, time scales, and cell densities. At large length scales and time scales collective migration slows as cell density rises, yet the fastest cells move in large, multicell groups whose scale grows with increasing cell density. This behavior has an intriguing analogy to dynamic heterogeneities found in particulate systems as they become more crowded and approach a glass transition. In addition we find a diminishing self-diffusivity of short-wavelength motions within the cell layer, and growing peaks in the vibrational density of states associated with cooperative cell-shape fluctuations. Both of these observations are also intriguingly reminiscent of a glass transition. Thus, these results provide a broad and suggestive analogy between cell motion within a confluent layer and the dynamics of supercooled colloidal and molecular fluids approaching a glass transition.


Asunto(s)
Movimiento Celular/fisiología , Células Epiteliales/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Animales , Línea Celular , Perros , Desarrollo Embrionario/fisiología , Células Epiteliales/citología , Cicatrización de Heridas/fisiología
14.
Science ; 379(6638): 1248-1252, 2023 Mar 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36952407

RESUMEN

Among the diverse areas of 3D printing, high-quality silicone printing is one of the least available and most restrictive. However, silicone-based components are integral to numerous advanced technologies and everyday consumer products. We developed a silicone 3D printing technique that produces precise, accurate, strong, and functional structures made from several commercially available silicone formulations. To achieve this level of performance, we developed a support material made from a silicone oil emulsion. This material exhibits negligible interfacial tension against silicone-based inks, eliminating the disruptive forces that often drive printed silicone features to deform and break apart. The versatility of this approach enables the use of established silicone formulations in fabricating complex structures and features as small as 8 micrometers in diameter.

15.
Nat Mater ; 10(6): 469-75, 2011 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21602808

RESUMEN

Cells comprising a tissue migrate as part of a collective. How collective processes are coordinated over large multi-cellular assemblies has remained unclear, however, because mechanical stresses exerted at cell-cell junctions have not been accessible experimentally. We report here maps of these stresses within and between cells comprising a monolayer. Within the cell sheet there arise unanticipated fluctuations of mechanical stress that are severe, emerge spontaneously, and ripple across the monolayer. Within that stress landscape, local cellular migrations follow local orientations of maximal principal stress. Migrations of both endothelial and epithelial monolayers conform to this behaviour, as do breast cancer cell lines before but not after the epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Collective migration in these diverse systems is seen to be governed by a simple but unifying physiological principle: neighbouring cells join forces to transmit appreciable normal stress across the cell-cell junction, but migrate along orientations of minimal intercellular shear stress.


Asunto(s)
Movimiento Celular/fisiología , Animales , Células Cultivadas , Endotelio Vascular/metabolismo , Células Epiteliales/metabolismo , Uniones Intercelulares/metabolismo , Ratas , Estrés Mecánico
16.
Phys Rev Lett ; 108(21): 218103, 2012 May 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23003305

RESUMEN

We introduce confocal differential dynamic microscopy (ConDDM), a new technique yielding information comparable to that given by light scattering but in dense, opaque, fluorescent samples of micron-sized objects that cannot be probed easily with other existing techniques. We measure the correct wave vector q-dependent structure and hydrodynamic factors of concentrated hard-sphere-like colloids. We characterize concentrated swimming bacteria, observing ballistic motion in the bulk and a new compressed-exponential scaling of dynamics, and determine the velocity distribution; by contrast, near the coverslip, dynamics scale differently, suggesting that bacterial motion near surfaces fundamentally differs from that of freely swimming organisms.

17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 106(43): 18109-13, 2009 Oct 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19826092

RESUMEN

The bacterium Bacillus subtilis produces the molecule surfactin, which is known to enhance the spreading of multicellular colonies on nutrient substrates by lowering the surface tension of the surrounding fluid, and to aid in the formation of aerial structures. Here we present experiments and a mathematical model that demonstrate how the differential accumulation rates induced by the geometry of the bacterial film give rise to surfactant waves. The spreading flux increases with increasing biofilm viscosity. Community associations are known to protect bacterial populations from environmental challenges such as predation, heat, or chemical stresses, and enable digestion of a broader range of nutritive sources. This study provides evidence of enhanced dispersal through cooperative motility, and points to nonintuitive methods for controlling the spread of biofilms.


Asunto(s)
Bacillus subtilis/fisiología , Biopelículas , Lipopéptidos/biosíntesis , Péptidos Cíclicos/biosíntesis , Tensoactivos/metabolismo , Bacillus subtilis/química , Bacillus subtilis/citología , Adhesión Bacteriana , Modelos Biológicos , Viscosidad
18.
Adv Nanobiomed Res ; 2(10)2022 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36419640

RESUMEN

Microporous annealed particle (MAP) hydrogels have emerged as a versatile biomaterial platform for regenerative medicine. MAP hydrogels have been used for the delivery of cells and organoids but often require annealing post injection by an external source. We engineered an injectable, self-annealing MAP hydrogel with reversible interparticle linkages based on guest-host functionalized polyethylene glycol maleimide (PEG-MAL) microgels. We evaluated the effect of guest-host linkages on different types of microgels fabricated by either batch emulsion or mechanical fragmentation methods. Batch emulsion generated small spherical microgels with controllable 10-100 µm diameters and mechanical fragmentation generated irregular microgels with larger diameters (100-200 µm). Spherical microgels (15 µm) showed self-healing behavior and completely recovered from high strain while fragmented microgels (133 µm) did not recover. Guest-host interactions significantly contributed to the mechanical properties of spherical microgels but had no effect on fragmented microgels. Spherical microgels were superior to the fragmented microgels for co-injection of immune cells and pancreatic islets due to their lower force of injection, demonstrating more homogeneously distributed cells and greater cell viability after injection. Based on these studies, the spherical guest-host MAP hydrogels provide a controllable, injectable scaffold for engineered microenvironments and cell delivery applications.

19.
Biophys Rev (Melville) ; 3(3): 031307, 2022 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38505275

RESUMEN

Many recently developed 3D bioprinting strategies operate by extruding aqueous biopolymer solutions directly into a variety of different support materials constituted from swollen, solvated, aqueous, polymer assemblies. In developing these 3D printing methods and materials, great care is often taken to tune the rheological behaviors of both inks and 3D support media. By contrast, much less attention has been given to the physics of the interfaces created when structuring one polymer phase into another in embedded 3D printing applications. For example, it is currently unclear whether a dynamic interfacial tension between miscible phases stabilizes embedded 3D bioprinted structures as they are shaped while in a liquid state. Interest in the physics of interfaces between complex fluids has grown dramatically since the discovery of liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) in living cells. We believe that many new insights coming from this burst of investigation into LLPS within biological contexts can be leveraged to develop new materials and methods for improved 3D bioprinting that leverage LLPS in mixtures of biopolymers, biocompatible synthetic polymers, and proteins. Thus, in this review article, we highlight work at the interface between recent LLPS research and embedded 3D bioprinting methods and materials, and we introduce a 3D bioprinting method that leverages LLPS to stabilize printed biopolymer inks embedded in a bioprinting support material.

20.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 9(25): e2201392, 2022 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35712780

RESUMEN

Human in vitro models of neural tissue with tunable microenvironment and defined spatial arrangement are needed to facilitate studies of brain development and disease. Towards this end, embedded printing inside granular gels holds great promise as it allows precise patterning of extremely soft tissue constructs. However, granular printing support formulations are restricted to only a handful of materials. Therefore, there has been a need for novel materials that take advantage of versatile biomimicry of bulk hydrogels while providing high-fidelity support for embedded printing akin to granular gels. To address this need, Authors present a modular platform for bioengineering of neuronal networks via direct embedded 3D printing of human stem cells inside Self-Healing Annealable Particle-Extracellular matrix (SHAPE) composites. SHAPE composites consist of soft microgels immersed in viscous extracellular-matrix solution to enable precise and programmable patterning of human stem cells and consequent generation mature subtype-specific neurons that extend projections into the volume of the annealed support. The developed approach further allows multi-ink deposition, live spatial and temporal monitoring of oxygen levels, as well as creation of vascular-like channels. Due to its modularity and versatility, SHAPE biomanufacturing toolbox has potential to be used in applications beyond functional modeling of mechanically sensitive neural constructs.


Asunto(s)
Microgeles , Tejido Nervioso , Humanos , Hidrogeles , Impresión Tridimensional , Andamios del Tejido
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