Deciphering the combinatorial roles of geometric, mechanical, and adhesion cues in regulation of cell spreading.
Deciphering the combinatorial roles of geometric, mechanical, and adhesion cues in regulation of cell spreading.
Blog Article
Significant effort has gone towards parsing out the effects of surrounding microenvironment on macroscopic behavior of stem cells.Many of the microenvironmental cues, however, are intertwined, and thus, further studies are warranted to identify the intricate interplay among the conflicting downstream signaling pathways that ultimately guide a cell response.In this contribution, by patterning adhesive PEG (polyethylene glycol) hydrogels using Dip Pen Nanolithography (DPN), we demonstrate that substrate elasticity, subcellular elasticity, ligand density, and Journal topography ultimately define mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) spreading and shape.Physical characteristics are parsed individually with 7 kilopascal (kPa) hydrogel islands leading to smaller, spindle shaped cells and 105 kPa hydrogel islands leading to larger, polygonal cell shapes.In a parallel effort, a finite element model was constructed to characterize and confirm experimental findings and aid as a predictive tool in modeling cell microenvironments.
Signaling pathway inhibition studies suggested that RhoA is a key regulator of cell response to the Pre-Rolled cooperative effect of the tunable substrate variables.These results are significant for the engineering of cell-extra cellular matrix interfaces and ultimately decoupling matrix bound cues presented to cells in a tissue microenvironment for regenerative medicine.