Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Tissue cells display mechanosensitivity in their ability to discern and respond to changes in the viscoelastic properties of their surroundings. By anchoring and pulling, cells are capable of translating mechanical stimuli into a biologi...
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ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-27842019-05-10T15:21:00Z Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse Minner, Daniel Eugene Naumann, Christoph A. Long, Eric C. (Eric Charles) Suter, Daniel Shah, Kavita cellular mechanoresponse phospholipid bilayer substrate viscosity nanaparticles mechansensing mechanotransduction Bilayer lipid membranes Viscosity Cells -- Growth Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Tissue cells display mechanosensitivity in their ability to discern and respond to changes in the viscoelastic properties of their surroundings. By anchoring and pulling, cells are capable of translating mechanical stimuli into a biological response through a process known as mechanotransduction, a pathway believed to critically impact cell adhesion, morphology and multiple cellular processes from migration to differentiation. While previous studies on polymeric gels have revealed the influence of substrate elasticity on cellular shape and function, a lack of suitable substrates (i.e. with mobile cell-substrate linkers) has hindered research on the role of substrate viscosity. This work presents the successful design and characterization of lipid-bilayer based cell substrates of tunable viscosity affecting cell-substrate linker mobility through changes in viscous drag. Here, two complementary membrane systems were employed to span a wide range of viscosity. Single polymer-tethered lipid bilayers were used to generate subtle changes in substrate viscosity while multiple, polymer-interconnected lipid bilayer stacks were capable of producing dramatic changes in substrate viscosity. The homogeneity and integrity of these novel multibilayer systems in the presence of adherent cells was confirmed using optical microscopy techniques. Profound changes in cellular growth, phenotype and cytoskeletal organization confirm the ability of cells to sense changes in viscosity. Moreover, increased migration speeds coupled with rapid area fluctuations suggest a transition to a different migration mode in response to the dramatic changes in substrate viscosity. 2012-03-20T19:48:35Z 2012-03-20T19:48:35Z 2012-03-20 http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2784 en_US |
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cellular mechanoresponse phospholipid bilayer substrate viscosity nanaparticles mechansensing mechanotransduction Bilayer lipid membranes Viscosity Cells -- Growth |
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cellular mechanoresponse phospholipid bilayer substrate viscosity nanaparticles mechansensing mechanotransduction Bilayer lipid membranes Viscosity Cells -- Growth Minner, Daniel Eugene Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse |
description |
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Tissue cells display mechanosensitivity in their ability to discern and respond to changes in the viscoelastic properties of their surroundings. By anchoring and pulling, cells are capable of translating mechanical stimuli into a biological response through a process known as mechanotransduction, a pathway believed to critically impact cell adhesion, morphology and multiple cellular processes from migration to differentiation. While previous studies on polymeric gels have revealed the influence of substrate elasticity on cellular shape and function, a lack of suitable substrates (i.e. with mobile cell-substrate linkers) has hindered research on the role of substrate viscosity. This work presents the successful design and characterization of lipid-bilayer based cell substrates of tunable viscosity affecting cell-substrate linker mobility through changes in viscous drag. Here, two complementary membrane systems were employed to span a wide range of viscosity. Single polymer-tethered lipid bilayers were used to generate subtle changes in substrate viscosity while multiple, polymer-interconnected lipid bilayer stacks were capable of producing dramatic changes in substrate viscosity. The homogeneity and integrity of these novel multibilayer systems in the presence of adherent cells was confirmed using optical microscopy techniques. Profound changes in cellular growth, phenotype and cytoskeletal organization confirm the ability of cells to sense changes in viscosity. Moreover, increased migration speeds coupled with rapid area fluctuations suggest a transition to a different migration mode in response to the dramatic changes in substrate viscosity. |
author2 |
Naumann, Christoph A. |
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Naumann, Christoph A. Minner, Daniel Eugene |
author |
Minner, Daniel Eugene |
author_sort |
Minner, Daniel Eugene |
title |
Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse |
title_short |
Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse |
title_full |
Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse |
title_fullStr |
Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse |
title_full_unstemmed |
Design of Biomembrane-Mimicking Substrates of Tunable Viscosity to Regulate Cellular Mechanoresponse |
title_sort |
design of biomembrane-mimicking substrates of tunable viscosity to regulate cellular mechanoresponse |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1805/2784 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT minnerdanieleugene designofbiomembranemimickingsubstratesoftunableviscositytoregulatecellularmechanoresponse |
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1719079845960351744 |