Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.

Cells have the ability to actively sense their mechanical environment and respond to both substrate stiffness and stretch by altering their adhesion, proliferation, locomotion, morphology, and synthetic profile. In order to elucidate the interrelated effects of different mechanical stimuli on cell p...

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Main Authors: Angela M Throm Quinlan, Leslie N Sierad, Andrew K Capulli, Laura E Firstenberg, Kristen L Billiar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3156127?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5132f076aceb4f849bd94863b4af864b2020-11-25T02:09:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0168e2327210.1371/journal.pone.0023272Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.Angela M Throm QuinlanLeslie N SieradAndrew K CapulliLaura E FirstenbergKristen L BilliarCells have the ability to actively sense their mechanical environment and respond to both substrate stiffness and stretch by altering their adhesion, proliferation, locomotion, morphology, and synthetic profile. In order to elucidate the interrelated effects of different mechanical stimuli on cell phenotype in vitro, we have developed a method for culturing mammalian cells in a two-dimensional environment at a wide range of combined levels of substrate stiffness and dynamic stretch. Polyacrylamide gels were covalently bonded to flexible silicone culture plates and coated with monomeric collagen for cell adhesion. Substrate stiffness was adjusted from relatively soft (G' = 0.3 kPa) to stiff (G' = 50 kPa) by altering the ratio of acrylamide to bis-acrylamide, and the silicone membranes were stretched over circular loading posts by applying vacuum pressure to impart near-uniform stretch, as confirmed by strain field analysis. As a demonstration of the system, porcine aortic valve interstitial cells (VIC) and human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) were plated on soft and stiff substrates either statically cultured or exposed to 10% equibiaxial or pure uniaxial stretch at 1 Hz for 6 hours. In all cases, cell attachment and cell viability were high. On soft substrates, VICs cultured statically exhibit a small rounded morphology, significantly smaller than on stiff substrates (p<0.05). Following equibiaxial cyclic stretch, VICs spread to the extent of cells cultured on stiff substrates, but did not reorient in response to uniaxial stretch to the extent of cells stretched on stiff substrates. hMSCs exhibited a less pronounced response than VICs, likely due to a lower stiffness threshold for spreading on static gels. These preliminary data demonstrate that inhibition of spreading due to a lack of matrix stiffness surrounding a cell may be overcome by externally applied stretch suggesting similar mechanotransduction mechanisms for sensing stiffness and stretch.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3156127?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angela M Throm Quinlan
Leslie N Sierad
Andrew K Capulli
Laura E Firstenberg
Kristen L Billiar
spellingShingle Angela M Throm Quinlan
Leslie N Sierad
Andrew K Capulli
Laura E Firstenberg
Kristen L Billiar
Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Angela M Throm Quinlan
Leslie N Sierad
Andrew K Capulli
Laura E Firstenberg
Kristen L Billiar
author_sort Angela M Throm Quinlan
title Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.
title_short Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.
title_full Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.
title_fullStr Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.
title_full_unstemmed Combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.
title_sort combining dynamic stretch and tunable stiffness to probe cell mechanobiology in vitro.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Cells have the ability to actively sense their mechanical environment and respond to both substrate stiffness and stretch by altering their adhesion, proliferation, locomotion, morphology, and synthetic profile. In order to elucidate the interrelated effects of different mechanical stimuli on cell phenotype in vitro, we have developed a method for culturing mammalian cells in a two-dimensional environment at a wide range of combined levels of substrate stiffness and dynamic stretch. Polyacrylamide gels were covalently bonded to flexible silicone culture plates and coated with monomeric collagen for cell adhesion. Substrate stiffness was adjusted from relatively soft (G' = 0.3 kPa) to stiff (G' = 50 kPa) by altering the ratio of acrylamide to bis-acrylamide, and the silicone membranes were stretched over circular loading posts by applying vacuum pressure to impart near-uniform stretch, as confirmed by strain field analysis. As a demonstration of the system, porcine aortic valve interstitial cells (VIC) and human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) were plated on soft and stiff substrates either statically cultured or exposed to 10% equibiaxial or pure uniaxial stretch at 1 Hz for 6 hours. In all cases, cell attachment and cell viability were high. On soft substrates, VICs cultured statically exhibit a small rounded morphology, significantly smaller than on stiff substrates (p<0.05). Following equibiaxial cyclic stretch, VICs spread to the extent of cells cultured on stiff substrates, but did not reorient in response to uniaxial stretch to the extent of cells stretched on stiff substrates. hMSCs exhibited a less pronounced response than VICs, likely due to a lower stiffness threshold for spreading on static gels. These preliminary data demonstrate that inhibition of spreading due to a lack of matrix stiffness surrounding a cell may be overcome by externally applied stretch suggesting similar mechanotransduction mechanisms for sensing stiffness and stretch.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3156127?pdf=render
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