Kevin P Grassie, Fei Wang, Bryan D Huey, Yusuf M Khan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mechanical forces on cells and tissues are known to play key roles in regulating cell fate, function, and tissue repair. In bone tissue engineering, mechanical stimulation of cell-hydrogel constructs with low-intensity ultrasound has become a promising therapy for improving the pace and extent of bone regeneration in challenging defects, though its physical and biological mechanisms are not fully understood. In particular, the local ultrasound-induced forces that are imparted to fully encapsulated cells have not been directly quantified. Here, we have developed, validated, and applied a novel 3D force microscopy technique (3D-FM) that extends established principles of unconstrained, regularized, Fourier domain traction force microscopy to reconstruct forces within ultrasound-displaced 3D cell-hydrogel constructs. Validation tests with simulated data demonstrated that the algorithm is capable of reconstructing simple and complex force-density fields from simulated displacements and is robust against corruption with noise. 3D-FM was then used to estimate the ultrasound-induced forces around a bone marrow stromal cell within a soft collagen hydrogel. Localized forces near the cell had magnitudes comparable to other reported cell-scale forces (~ 100 nN), with components both parallel and perpendicular to the direction of ultrasound propagation. This work demonstrates that 3D-FM can elucidate the microscopic physical effects of low-intensity ultrasound on cells in soft matrices used in bone regeneration applications, which can provide valuable insight into the relationship between applied physical forces and cellular responses.
期刊介绍:
Mechanics regulates biological processes at the molecular, cellular, tissue, organ, and organism levels. A goal of this journal is to promote basic and applied research that integrates the expanding knowledge-bases in the allied fields of biomechanics and mechanobiology. Approaches may be experimental, theoretical, or computational; they may address phenomena at the nano, micro, or macrolevels. Of particular interest are investigations that
(1) quantify the mechanical environment in which cells and matrix function in health, disease, or injury,
(2) identify and quantify mechanosensitive responses and their mechanisms,
(3) detail inter-relations between mechanics and biological processes such as growth, remodeling, adaptation, and repair, and
(4) report discoveries that advance therapeutic and diagnostic procedures.
Especially encouraged are analytical and computational models based on solid mechanics, fluid mechanics, or thermomechanics, and their interactions; also encouraged are reports of new experimental methods that expand measurement capabilities and new mathematical methods that facilitate analysis.