142 research outputs found

    Part I: A novel in-vitro system for simultaneous mechanical stimulation and time-lapse microscopy in 3D

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    To investigate the migration response of cells to changes in their biophysical environment, a novel uniaxial cell stimulation device (UCSD) has been designed and tested. The device is capable of applying very precise user-defined static or dynamic mechanical stimuli in a physiologically relevant strain window (up to 50%) and frequency bandwidth (up to 2Hz) to cells residing in a three-dimensional (3D) environment while single-cell migration is simultaneously measured by time-lapse microscopy. The system is an advancement over uniaxial loading devices reported to date in that it allows temporal and spatial quantification of migration as a function of the micromechanical environment. We make use of the favorable physical and biological properties of poly(ethylene glycol) hydrogels as model matrix and present a method for fabricating cell-containing hydrogel constructs. The 3D strain field within these constructs is modeled by finite element analysis. Fibroblasts reversibly altered their morphology and orientation in response to the strain field. In the succeeding companion paper we then exploit the system to analyze fibroblast motility induced by different stimulation regimes (refer to part II)

    Part II: Fibroblasts preferentially migrate in the direction of principal strain

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    A growing body of evidence suggests that the sensory information from the cytoskeleton and integrins may be responsible for guiding migration during mechano- and haptotaxis. However, the dual function of these subcellular structures as mechano-sensors and -actuators is only partially understood. Using a new cell chamber described in the preceding companion paper (Ref to part I, Raeber et al. 2007a) we investigated the migration response of adhesion-dependent fibroblasts embedded 3-dimensionally within synthetic protease-sensitive poly(ethylene glycol) hydrogels to stepwise and cyclic mechanical loads. To that end, we developed a spatially and temporally resolved migration analysis technique capable of providing estimates of statistical cell migration parameters along and perpendicular to the main strain direction. Fibroblasts reoriented themselves in the direction of principal strain, increased their proteolytic migration activity and moved preferentially parallel to the principal strain axis. These results point to a possible correlation between planes of iso-strain and migration direction

    Non-volatile and volatile memory behaviour in oxygenated amorphous carbon electrochemical metallisation devices

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    The resistive switching behaviour of oxygenated amorphous carbon electrochemical metallisation devices is investigated. The effect of temperature on the microstructure and composition of the oxygenated carbon matrix is also investigated by annealing in situ in a transmission electron microscope. The devices exhibit controllable bipolar non-volatile and bi-directional volatile resistive switching behaviour that is dependent on the resistance state of the device and the polarity of the RESET voltage. The characteristics presented suggest suitability for incorporation into neuromorphic computing and memory storage technologies as memory cells, selector devices, or synaptic emulators

    PrP-dependent association of prions with splenic but not circulating lymphocytes of scrapie-infected mice.

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    An intact immune system, and particularly the presence of mature B lymphocytes, is crucial for mouse scrapie pathogenesis in the brain after peripheral exposure. Prions are accumulated in the lymphoreticular system (LRS), but the identity of the cells containing infectivity and their role in neuroinvasion have not been determined. We show here that although prion infectivity in the spleen is associated with B and T lymphocytes and to a lesser degree with the stroma, no infectivity could be detected in lymphocytes from blood. In wild-type mice, which had been irradiated and reconstituted with PrP-deficient lymphohaematopoietic stem cells and inoculated with scrapie prions, infectivity in the spleen was present in the stroma but not in lymphocytes. Therefore, splenic B and T lymphocytes can either synthesize prions or acquire them from another source, but only when they express PrP

    Repetitive Immunization Enhances the Susceptibility of Mice to Peripherally Administered Prions

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    The susceptibility of humans and animals to prion infections is determined by the virulence of the infectious agent, by genetic modifiers, and by hitherto unknown host and environmental risk factors. While little is known about the latter two, the activation state of the immune system was surmised to influence prion susceptibility. Here we administered prions to mice that were repeatedly immunized by two initial injections of CpG oligodeoxynucleotides followed by repeated injections of bovine serum albumin/alum. Immunization greatly reduced the required dosage of peripherally administered prion inoculum necessary to induce scrapie in 50% of mice. No difference in susceptibility was observed following intracerebral prion challenge. Due to its profound impact onto scrapie susceptibility, the host immune status may determine disease penetrance after low-dose prion exposure, including those that may give rise to iatrogenic and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

    A Cellular Potts Model simulating cell migration on and in matrix environments

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    Cell migration on and through extracellular matrix plays a critical role in a wide variety of physiological and pathological phenomena, and in scaffold-based tissue engineering. Migration is regulated by a number of extracellular matrix- or cell-derived biophysical parameters, such as matrix fiber orientation, gap size, and elasticity, or cell deformation, proteolysis, and adhesion. We here present an extended Cellular Potts Model (CPM) able to qualitatively and quantitatively describe cell migratory phenotype on both two-dimensional substrates and within three-dimensional environments, in a close comparison with experimental evidence. As distinct features of our approach, the cells are represented by compartmentalized discrete objects, differentiated in the nucleus and in the cytosolic region, while the extracellular matrix is composed of a fibrous mesh and of a homogeneous fluid. Our model provides a strong correlation of the directionality of migration with the topological ECM distribution and, further, a biphasic dependence of migration on the matrix density, and in part adhesion, in both two-dimensional and three-dimensional settings. Moreover, we demonstrate that the directional component of cell movement is strongly correlated with the topological distribution of the ECM fibrous network. In the three-dimensional networks, we also investigate the effects of the matrix mechanical microstructure, observing that, at a given distribution of fibers, cell motility has a subtle bimodal relation with the elasticity of the scaffold. Finally, cell locomotion requires deformation of the cell's nucleus and/or cell-derived proteolysis of steric fibrillar obstacles within rather rigid matrices characterized by small pores, not, however, for sufficiently large pores. In conclusion, we here propose a mathematical modeling approach that serves to characterize cell migration as a biological phenomen in health, disease and tissue engineering applications. The research that led to the present paper was partially supported by a grant of the group GNFM of INdA

    In Vivo Generation of Neurotoxic Prion Protein: Role for Hsp70 in Accumulation of Misfolded Isoforms

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    Prion diseases are incurable neurodegenerative disorders in which the normal cellular prion protein (PrPC) converts into a misfolded isoform (PrPSc) with unique biochemical and structural properties that correlate with disease. In humans, prion disorders, such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, present typically with a sporadic origin, where unknown mechanisms lead to the spontaneous misfolding and deposition of wild type PrP. To shed light on how wild-type PrP undergoes conformational changes and which are the cellular components involved in this process, we analyzed the dynamics of wild-type PrP from hamster in transgenic flies. In young flies, PrP demonstrates properties of the benign PrPC; in older flies, PrP misfolds, acquires biochemical and structural properties of PrPSc, and induces spongiform degeneration of brain neurons. Aged flies accumulate insoluble PrP that resists high concentrations of denaturing agents and contains PrPSc-specific conformational epitopes. In contrast to PrPSc from mammals, PrP is proteinase-sensitive in flies. Thus, wild-type PrP rapidly converts in vivo into a neurotoxic, protease-sensitive isoform distinct from prototypical PrPSc. Next, we investigated the role of molecular chaperones in PrP misfolding in vivo. Remarkably, Hsp70 prevents the accumulation of PrPSc-like conformers and protects against PrP-dependent neurodegeneration. This protective activity involves the direct interaction between Hsp70 and PrP, which may occur in active membrane microdomains such as lipid rafts, where we detected Hsp70. These results highlight the ability of wild-type PrP to spontaneously convert in vivo into a protease-sensitive isoform that is neurotoxic, supporting the idea that protease-resistant PrPSc is not required for pathology. Moreover, we identify a new role for Hsp70 in the accumulation of misfolded PrP. Overall, we provide new insight into the mechanisms of spontaneous accumulation of neurotoxic PrP and uncover the potential therapeutic role of Hsp70 in treating these devastating disorders

    Matrix Rigidity Induces Osteolytic Gene Expression of Metastatic Breast Cancer Cells

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    Nearly 70% of breast cancer patients with advanced disease will develop bone metastases. Once established in bone, tumor cells produce factors that cause changes in normal bone remodeling, such as parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP). While enhanced expression of PTHrP is known to stimulate osteoclasts to resorb bone, the environmental factors driving tumor cells to express PTHrP in the early stages of development of metastatic bone disease are unknown. In this study, we have shown that tumor cells known to metastasize to bone respond to 2D substrates with rigidities comparable to that of the bone microenvironment by increasing expression and production of PTHrP. The cellular response is regulated by Rho-dependent actomyosin contractility mediated by TGF-ß signaling. Inhibition of Rho-associated kinase (ROCK) using both pharmacological and genetic approaches decreased PTHrP expression. Furthermore, cells expressing a dominant negative form of the TGF-ß receptor did not respond to substrate rigidity, and inhibition of ROCK decreased PTHrP expression induced by exogenous TGF-ß. These observations suggest a role for the differential rigidity of the mineralized bone microenvironment in early stages of tumor-induced osteolysis, which is especially important in metastatic cancer since many cancers (such as those of the breast and lung) preferentially metastasize to bone
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