37 research outputs found
Inherent Interfacial Mechanical Gradients in 3D Hydrogels Influence Tumor Cell Behaviors
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
Implementing Quantum Gates and Algorithms in Ultracold Polar Molecules
We numerically investigate the implementation of small quantum algorithms, an arithmetic adder and the Grover search algorithm, in registers of ultracold polar molecules trapped in a lattice by concatenating intramolecular and intermolecular gates. The molecular states are modulated by the exposition to static electric and magnetic fields different for each molecule. The examples are carried out in a two-molecule case. Qubits are encoded either in rovibrational or in hyperfine states, and intermolecular gates involve states of neighboring molecules. Here we use pi pulses (i.e. laser pulses such that the integral of the product of the transition dipole moment and their envelope is equal to pi, thus ensuring a total population inversion between two states) and pulses designed by optimal control theory adapted to a multi-target problem to drive unitary transformations between the qubit states.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Roles of endothelial A-type lamins in migration of T cells on and under endothelial layers
Stiff nuclei in cell-dense microenvironments may serve as distinct biomechanical cues for cell migration, but such a possibility has not been tested experimentally. As a first step addressing this question, we altered nuclear stiffness of endothelial cells (ECs) by reducing the expression of A-type lamins using siRNA, and investigated the migration of T cells on and under EC layers. While most T cells crawling on control EC layers avoided crossing over EC nuclei, a significantly higher fraction of T cells on EC layers with reduced expression of A-type lamins crossed over EC nuclei. This result suggests that stiff EC nuclei underlying T cells may serve as “duro-repulsive” cues to direct T cell migration toward less stiff EC cytoplasm. During subendothelial migration under EC layers with reduced expression of A-type lamins, T cells made prolonged contact and substantially deformed EC nuclei, resulting in reduced speed and directional persistence. This result suggests that EC nuclear stiffness promotes fast and directionally persistent subendothelial migration of T cells by allowing minimum interaction between T cells and EC nuclei