Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets

Initial attachment to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and consequent spreading is a necessary process in the cell cycle of which little is known. Cell spreading has been well-recognized in 2D systems, however, the native fibrous ECM presents cells with 3D biophysical cues. Thus, using suspended fibe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gill, Amritpal Singh
Other Authors: Mechanical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73504
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-73504
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-735042020-09-29T05:44:18Z Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets Gill, Amritpal Singh Mechanical Engineering Nain, Amrinder Kapania, Rakesh K. Behkam, Bahareh nanofiber attachment cell force cell spreading single-cell Initial attachment to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and consequent spreading is a necessary process in the cell cycle of which little is known. Cell spreading has been well-recognized in 2D systems, however, the native fibrous ECM presents cells with 3D biophysical cues. Thus, using suspended fibers as model systems, we present the development of a novel platform (Cell-STEPs) capable of capturing cell attachment dynamics and forces from the moment a cell in suspension contacts the fiber. Cell-STEPs comprises of a custom glass-bottom petri dish with a lid to deliver a constant supply of CO2 to maintain pH. Fibrous scaffolds are attached in the dish to allow cellular investigations over extended periods of time. We find that cell-fiber attachment occurs in three progressive phases: initial attachment of cell to fiber (phase 0), rapid drop in circularity (phase 1), and increase in cell spread area (phase 2). Furthermore, using iterative inverse methods, forces involved in cell spreading through deflection of fibers were estimated. Our findings provide new insights in attachment biomechanics, including initial sensing and latching of cell to fiber with a negligible or protrusive force, followed by rapid loss in circularity through protrusion sensing at nearly constant spread area and minimal force generation, transitioning to a final phase of increased contractile forces until spread area and force saturation is observed. Also, anisotropic spreading of cells on single and two-fibers are closely related, while cells attached to several fibers take longer and spread isotropically. The Cell-STEPs platform allows, for the first time, detailed interrogations in the discrete and orchestrated adhesion steps involved in cell-fibrous matrix recognition and attachment along with simultaneous measurements of forces involved in cell attachment. Master of Science 2016-11-26T07:00:14Z 2016-11-26T07:00:14Z 2015-06-04 Thesis vt_gsexam:5651 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73504 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic nanofiber
attachment
cell force
cell spreading
single-cell
spellingShingle nanofiber
attachment
cell force
cell spreading
single-cell
Gill, Amritpal Singh
Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets
description Initial attachment to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and consequent spreading is a necessary process in the cell cycle of which little is known. Cell spreading has been well-recognized in 2D systems, however, the native fibrous ECM presents cells with 3D biophysical cues. Thus, using suspended fibers as model systems, we present the development of a novel platform (Cell-STEPs) capable of capturing cell attachment dynamics and forces from the moment a cell in suspension contacts the fiber. Cell-STEPs comprises of a custom glass-bottom petri dish with a lid to deliver a constant supply of CO2 to maintain pH. Fibrous scaffolds are attached in the dish to allow cellular investigations over extended periods of time. We find that cell-fiber attachment occurs in three progressive phases: initial attachment of cell to fiber (phase 0), rapid drop in circularity (phase 1), and increase in cell spread area (phase 2). Furthermore, using iterative inverse methods, forces involved in cell spreading through deflection of fibers were estimated. Our findings provide new insights in attachment biomechanics, including initial sensing and latching of cell to fiber with a negligible or protrusive force, followed by rapid loss in circularity through protrusion sensing at nearly constant spread area and minimal force generation, transitioning to a final phase of increased contractile forces until spread area and force saturation is observed. Also, anisotropic spreading of cells on single and two-fibers are closely related, while cells attached to several fibers take longer and spread isotropically. The Cell-STEPs platform allows, for the first time, detailed interrogations in the discrete and orchestrated adhesion steps involved in cell-fibrous matrix recognition and attachment along with simultaneous measurements of forces involved in cell attachment. === Master of Science
author2 Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Mechanical Engineering
Gill, Amritpal Singh
author Gill, Amritpal Singh
author_sort Gill, Amritpal Singh
title Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets
title_short Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets
title_full Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets
title_fullStr Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Novel Single-Cell Attachment and Spreading Platform Utilizing Fused-Fiber Nanonets
title_sort development of a novel single-cell attachment and spreading platform utilizing fused-fiber nanonets
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73504
work_keys_str_mv AT gillamritpalsingh developmentofanovelsinglecellattachmentandspreadingplatformutilizingfusedfibernanonets
_version_ 1719345810061131776