23 research outputs found

    Concentration Independent Modulation of Local Micromechanics in a Fibrin Gel

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    Methods for tuning extracellular matrix (ECM) mechanics in 3D cell culture that rely on increasing the concentration of either protein or cross-linking molecules fail to control important parameters such as pore size, ligand density, and molecular diffusivity. Alternatively, ECM stiffness can be modulated independently from protein concentration by mechanically loading the ECM. We have developed a novel device for generating stiffness gradients in naturally derived ECMs, where stiffness is tuned by inducing strain, while local mechanical properties are directly determined by laser tweezers based active microrheology (AMR). Hydrogel substrates polymerized within 35 mm diameter Petri dishes are strained non-uniformly by the precise rotation of an embedded cylindrical post, and exhibit a position-dependent stiffness with little to no modulation of local mesh geometry. Here we present the device in the context of fibrin hydrogels. First AMR is used to directly measure local micromechanics in unstrained hydrogels of increasing fibrin concentration. Changes in stiffness are then mapped within our device, where fibrin concentration is held constant. Fluorescence confocal imaging and orbital particle tracking are used to quantify structural changes in fibrin on the micro and nano levels respectively. The micromechanical strain stiffening measured by microrheology is not accompanied by ECM microstructural changes under our applied loads, as measured by confocal microscopy. However, super-resolution orbital tracking reveals nanostructural straightening, lengthening, and reduced movement of fibrin fibers. Furthermore, we show that aortic smooth muscle cells cultured within our device are morphologically sensitive to the induced mechanical gradient. Our results demonstrate a powerful cell culture tool that can be used in the study of mechanical effects on cellular physiology in naturally derived 3D ECM tissues

    Inherent Interfacial Mechanical Gradients in 3D Hydrogels Influence Tumor Cell Behaviors

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    Cells sense and respond to the rigidity of their microenvironment by altering their morphology and migration behavior. To examine this response, hydrogels with a range of moduli or mechanical gradients have been developed. Here, we show that edge effects inherent in hydrogels supported on rigid substrates also influence cell behavior. A Matrigel hydrogel was supported on a rigid glass substrate, an interface which computational techniques revealed to yield relative stiffening close to the rigid substrate support. To explore the influence of these gradients in 3D, hydrogels of varying Matrigel content were synthesized and the morphology, spreading, actin organization, and migration of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) tumor cells were examined at the lowest (<50 µm) and highest (>500 µm) gel positions. GBMs adopted bipolar morphologies, displayed actin stress fiber formation, and evidenced fast, mesenchymal migration close to the substrate, whereas away from the interface, they adopted more rounded or ellipsoid morphologies, displayed poor actin architecture, and evidenced slow migration with some amoeboid characteristics. Mechanical gradients produced via edge effects could be observed with other hydrogels and substrates and permit observation of responses to multiple mechanical environments in a single hydrogel. Thus, hydrogel-support edge effects could be used to explore mechanosensitivity in a single 3D hydrogel system and should be considered in 3D hydrogel cell culture systems

    Characterization of hydrogel microstructure using laser tweezers particle tracking and confocal reflection imaging.

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    Hydrogels are commonly used as extracellular matrix mimetics for applications in tissue engineering and increasingly as cell culture platforms with which to study the influence of biophysical and biochemical cues on cell function in 3D. In recent years, a significant number of studies have focused on linking substrate mechanical properties to cell function using standard methodologies to characterize the bulk mechanical properties of the hydrogel substrates. However, current understanding of the correlations between the microstructural mechanical properties of hydrogels and cell function in 3D is poor, in part because of a lack of appropriate techniques. Here we have utilized a laser tracking system, based on passive optical microrheology instrumentation, to characterize the microstructure of viscoelastic fibrin clots. Trajectories and mean square displacements were observed as bioinert PEGylated (PEG: polyethylene glycol) microspheres (1, 2 or 4.7 μm in diameter) diffused within confined pores created by the protein phase of fibrin hydrogels. Complementary confocal reflection imaging revealed microstructures comprised of a highly heterogeneous fibrin network with a wide range of pore sizes. As the protein concentration of fibrin gels was increased, our quantitative laser tracking measurements showed a corresponding decrease in particle mean square displacements with greater resolution and sensitivity than conventional imaging techniques. This platform-independent method will enable a more complete understanding of how changes in substrate mechanical properties simultaneously influence other microenvironmental parameters in 3D cultures

    Small-angle neutron scattering studies of the effects of amphotericin B on phospholipid and phospholipid-sterol membrane structure

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    AbstractSmall-angle neutron scattering (SANS) studies have been performed to study the structural changes induced in the membranes of vesicles prepared (by thin film evaporation) from phospholipid and mixed phospholipid–sterol mixtures, in the presence of different concentrations and different aggregation states of the anti-fungal drug, amphotericin B (AmB). In the majority of the experiments reported, the lipid vesicles were prepared with the drug added directly to the lipid dispersions dissolved in solvents favouring either AmB monomers or aggregates, and the vesicles then sonicated to a mean size of ~100nm. Experiments were also performed, however, in which micellar dispersions of the drug were added to pre-formed lipid and lipid–sterol vesicles. The vesicles were prepared using the phospholipid palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC), or mixtures of this lipid with either 30mol% cholesterol or 30mol% ergosterol. Analyses of the SANS data show that irrespective of the AmB concentration or aggregation state, there is an increase in the membrane thickness of both the pure POPC and the mixed POPC-sterol vesicles—in all cases amounting to ~4Å. The structural changes induced by the drug's insertion into the model fungal cell membranes (as mimicked by POPC-ergosterol vesicles) are thus the same as those resulting from its insertion into the model mammalian cell membranes (as mimicked by POPC-cholesterol vesicles). It is concluded that the specificity of AmB for fungal versus human cells does not arise because of (static) structural differences between lipid–cholesterol-AmB and lipid–ergosterol-AmB membranes, but more likely results from differences in the kinetics of their transmembrane pore formation and/or because of enthalpic differences between the two types of sterol-AmB complexes
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