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1.
Acta Biomater ; 113: 372-379, 2020 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32634483

ABSTRACT

Tensional homeostasis is widely recognized to exist at the length scales of organs and tissues, but the cellular length scale mechanism for tension regulation is not known. In this study, we explored whether tensional homeostasis emerges from the behavior of the individual focal adhesion (FA), which is the subcellular structure that transmits cell stress to the surrounding extracellular matrix. Past studies have suggested that cell contractility builds up until a certain displacement is achieved, and we thus hypothesized that tensional homeostasis may require a threshold level of substrate displacement. Micropattern traction microscopy was used to study a wide range of FA traction forces generated by bovine vascular smooth muscle cells and bovine aortic endothelial cells cultured on substrates of stiffness of 3.6, 6.7, 13.6, and 30 kPa. The most striking feature of FA dynamics observed here is that the substrate displacement resulting from FA traction forces is a unifying feature that determines FA tensional stability. Beyond approximately 1 µm of substrate displacement, FAs, regardless of cell type or substrate stiffness, exhibit a precipitous drop in temporal fluctuations of traction forces. These findings lead us to the conclusion that traction force dynamics collectively determine whether cells or cell ensembles develop tensional homeostasis, and this insight is necessary to fully understand how matrix stiffness impacts cellular behavior in healthy conditions and, more important, in pathological conditions such as cancer or vascular aging, where environmental stiffness is altered. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Tensional homeostasis is widely recognized to exist at the length scales of organs and tissues, but the cellular length scale mechanism for tension regulation is not known. In this study, we explored whether tensional homeostasis emerges from the behavior of the individual focal adhesion (FA), which is the subcellular structure that transmits cell stress to the extracellular matrix. We utilized micropattern traction microscopy to measure time-lapses of FA forces in vascular smooth muscle cells and in endothelial cells. We discovered that the magnitude of the substrate displacement determines whether the FA has low temporal variability of traction forces. This finding is significant since it is the first known feature of tensional homeostasis that is broadly unifying across a range of environmental conditions and cell types.


Subject(s)
Endothelial Cells , Focal Adhesions , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cattle , Cell Adhesion , Homeostasis
2.
J Biomech ; 105: 109770, 2020 05 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32278526

ABSTRACT

When adherent cells are subjected to uniaxial sinusoidal stretch at frequencies close to physiological, their body and their contractile stress fibers realign nearly perpendicularly to the stretch axis. A common explanation for this phenomenon is that stress fibers reorient along the direction where they are unaffected by the applied cyclic stretch and thus can maintain optimal (homeostatic) tensile force. The ability of cells to achieve tensional homeostasis in response to external disturbances is important for normal physiological functions of cells and tissues and it provides protection against diseases, including cancer and atherosclerosis. However, quantitative experimental data that support the idea that stretch-induced reorientation is associated with tensional homeostasis are lacking. We observed previously that in response to uniaxial cyclic stretch of 10% strain amplitudes, traction forces of single endothelial cells reorient in the direction perpendicular to the stretch axis. Here we carried out a secondary analysis of those data to investigate whether this reorientation of traction forces is associated with tensional homeostasis. Our analysis showed that stretch-induced reorientation of traction forces was accompanied by attenuation of temporal variability of the traction field to the level that was observed in the absence of stretch. These findings represent a quantitative experimental evidence that stretch-induced reorientation of cellular traction forces is associated with the cell's tendency to achieve tensional homeostasis.


Subject(s)
Endothelial Cells , Stress Fibers , Homeostasis , Mechanical Phenomena , Stress, Mechanical
3.
J Biomech Eng ; 141(3)2019 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30347048

ABSTRACT

Causes of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are understood poorly, making diagnosis and treatment challenging. While many studies have investigated the biochemical and genetic aspects of ASD, whether and how mechanical characteristics of the autistic brain can modulate neuronal connectivity and cognition in ASD are unknown. Previously, it has been shown that ASD brains are characterized by abnormal white matter and disorganized neuronal connectivity; we hypothesized that these significant cellular-level structural changes may translate to changes in the mechanical properties of the autistic brain or regions therein. Here, we focused on tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), a genetic disorder with a high penetrance of ASD. We investigated mechanical differences between murine brains obtained from control and TSC cohorts at various deformation length- and time-scales. At the microscale, we conducted creep-compliance and stress relaxation experiments using atomic force microscope(AFM)-enabled indentation. At the mesoscale, we conducted impact indentation using a pendulum-based instrumented indenter to extract mechanical energy dissipation metrics. At the macroscale, we used oscillatory shear rheology to quantify the frequency-dependent shear moduli. Despite significant changes in the cellular organization of TSC brain tissue, we found no corresponding changes in the quantified mechanical properties at every length- and time-scale explored. This investigation of the mechanical characteristics of the brain has broadened our understanding of causes and markers of TSC/ASD, while raising questions about whether any mechanical differences can be detected in other animal models of ASD or other disease models that also feature abnormal brain structure.

4.
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol ; 311(3): C528-35, 2016 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27488661

ABSTRACT

Mammalian cells of various types exhibit the remarkable ability to adapt to externally applied mechanical stresses and strains. Because of this adaptation, cells can maintain their endogenous mechanical tension at a preferred (homeostatic) level, which is essential for normal physiological functions of cells and tissues and provides protection against various diseases, including atherosclerosis and cancer. Conventional wisdom is that the cell possesses the ability to maintain tensional homeostasis on its own. Recent findings showed, however, that isolated cells cannot maintain tensional homeostasis. Here we studied the effect of multicellular interactions on tensional homeostasis by measuring traction forces in isolated bovine aortic endothelial cells and in confluent and nonconfluent cell clusters of different sizes. We found that, in isolated cells, the traction field exhibited a highly dynamic and erratic behavior. However, in cell clusters, dynamic fluctuations of the traction field became attenuated with increasing cluster size, at a rate that was faster in nonconfluent than confluent clusters. The driving mechanism of attenuation of traction field fluctuations was statistical averaging of the noise, and the impeding mechanism was nonuniform stress distribution in the clusters, which resulted from intercellular force transmission, known as a "global tug-of-war." These results show that isolated cells could not maintain tensional homeostasis, which confirms previous findings, and that tensional homeostasis is a multicellular phenomenon, which is a novel finding.


Subject(s)
Biomechanical Phenomena/physiology , Endothelial Cells/physiology , Homeostasis/physiology , Animals , Aorta/physiology , Cattle , Cells, Cultured
5.
J Biomech ; 47(12): 3222-5, 2014 Sep 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25138630

ABSTRACT

Local intracellular variations of cell mechanical properties, which are essential for vital cellular functions, have not been well characterized and are poorly understood. Here, we used results from our previous biomechanical imaging study to obtain relationships between intracellular shear modulus and prestress. We found that the subcellular shear modulus vs. prestress relationships exhibited positive linear correlations, consistent with previously observed behaviors at the whole cell and tissue levels. This, in turn, suggests that the prestress may be a unifying factor that determines material properties of living matter at different length scales.


Subject(s)
Cell Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Mice , NIH 3T3 Cells , Stress, Mechanical
6.
Integr Biol (Camb) ; 6(3): 357-65, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24441735

ABSTRACT

Cellular traction forces are important quantitative measures in cell biology as they have provided much insight into cell behavior in contexts such as cellular migration, differentiation, and disease progression. However, the complex environment in vivo permits application of cell traction forces through multiple types of cell adhesion molecules. Currently available approaches to differentiate traction forces among multiple cell adhesion molecules are limited to specialized approaches to decouple cell-cell from cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) tractions. Here, we present a technique which uses indirect micropatterning onto a polyacrylamide gel to pattern multiple, spatially distinct fluorescently labeled ECM proteins, specifically gelatin and fibronectin (Fn), and confine the area to which cells can adhere. We found that cells interacting with both gelatin and Fn altered their traction forces significantly in comparison to cells on Fn-only substrates. This crosstalk interaction resulted in a decrease in overall traction forces on dual-patterned substrates as compared to cells on Fn-only substrates. This illustrates the unique need to study such interactions and demonstrates great potential in future studies in multi-ligand environments. Current micropatterning techniques on glass can easily be adapted to present other protein classes, such as cadherins, while maintaining control of adhesion spacing, cell spread area, and stiffness, each of which are important regulators of cell mechanobiology.


Subject(s)
Cell Adhesion Molecules/metabolism , Microscopy, Atomic Force/methods , 3T3 Cells , Acrylic Resins , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cell Adhesion/physiology , Cells, Cultured , Cellular Microenvironment/physiology , Extracellular Matrix Proteins/metabolism , Fibronectins/metabolism , Fluorescent Dyes , Gelatin/metabolism , Humans , Ligands , Mice , Surface Properties
7.
Biomech Model Mechanobiol ; 13(3): 665-78, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24022327

ABSTRACT

Knowledge of cell mechanical properties, such as elastic modulus, is essential to understanding the mechanisms by which cells carry out many integrated functions in health and disease. Cellular stiffness is regulated by the composition, structural organization, and indigenous mechanical stress (or prestress) borne by the cytoskeleton. Current methods for measuring stiffness and cytoskeletal prestress of living cells necessitate either limited spatial resolution but with high speed, or spatial maps of the entire cell at the expense of long imaging times. We have developed a novel technique, called biomechanical imaging, for generating maps of both cellular stiffness and prestress that requires less than 30 s of interrogation time, but which provides subcellular spatial resolution. The technique is based on the ability to measure tractions applied to the cell while simultaneously observing cell deformation, combined with capability to solve an elastic inverse problem to find cell stiffness and prestress distributions. We demonstrated the application of this technique by carrying out detailed mapping of the shear modulus and cytoskeletal prestress distributions of 3T3 fibroblasts, making no assumptions regarding those distributions or the correlation between them. We also showed that on the whole cell level, the average shear modulus is closely associated with the average prestress, which is consistent with the data from the literature. Data collection is a straightforward procedure that lends itself to other biochemical/biomechanical interventions. Biomechanical imaging thus offers a new tool that can be used in studies of cell biomechanics and mechanobiology where fast imaging of cell properties and prestress is desired at subcellular resolution.


Subject(s)
Stress, Mechanical , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Finite Element Analysis , Mice , Models, Theoretical , NIH 3T3 Cells
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