Literature DB >> 24138852

Mechanical fluidity of fully suspended biological cells.

John M Maloney1, Eric Lehnhardt, Alexandra F Long, Krystyn J Van Vliet.   

Abstract

Mechanical characteristics of single biological cells are used to identify and possibly leverage interesting differences among cells or cell populations. Fluidity-hysteresivity normalized to the extremes of an elastic solid or a viscous liquid-can be extracted from, and compared among, multiple rheological measurements of cells: creep compliance versus time, complex modulus versus frequency, and phase lag versus frequency. With multiple strategies available for acquisition of this nondimensional property, fluidity may serve as a useful and robust parameter for distinguishing cell populations, and for understanding the physical origins of deformability in soft matter. Here, for three disparate eukaryotic cell types deformed in the suspended state via optical stretching, we examine the dependence of fluidity on chemical and environmental influences at a timescale of ∼1 s. We find that fluidity estimates are consistent in the time and frequency domains under a structural damping (power-law or fractional-derivative) model, but not under an equivalent-complexity, lumped-component (spring-dashpot) model; the latter predicts spurious time constants. Although fluidity is suppressed by chemical cross-linking, we find that ATP depletion in the cell does not measurably alter the parameter, and we thus conclude that active ATP-driven events are not a crucial enabler of fluidity during linear viscoelastic deformation of a suspended cell. Finally, by using the capacity of optical stretching to produce near-instantaneous increases in cell temperature, we establish that fluidity increases with temperature-now measured in a fully suspended, sortable cell without the complicating factor of cell-substratum adhesion.
Copyright © 2013 Biophysical Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24138852      PMCID: PMC3797573          DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2013.08.040

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biophys J        ISSN: 0006-3495            Impact factor:   4.033


  60 in total

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9.  Cytoskeletal stiffness, friction, and fluidity of cancer cell lines with different metastatic potential.

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  9 in total

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2.  Dynamic chemical expansion of thin-film non-stoichiometric oxides at extreme temperatures.

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Journal:  Biomicrofluidics       Date:  2019-05-21       Impact factor: 2.800

5.  Epithelial cells fluidize upon adhesion but display mechanical homeostasis in the adherent state.

Authors:  Peter Nietmann; Jonathan E F Bodenschatz; Andrea M Cordes; Jannis Gottwald; Helen Rother-Nöding; Tabea Oswald; Andreas Janshoff
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2022-01-05       Impact factor: 4.033

6.  Mechanical phenotyping of K562 cells by the Micropipette Aspiration Technique allows identifying mechanical changes induced by drugs.

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7.  Volume Transitions of Isolated Cell Nuclei Induced by Rapid Temperature Increase.

Authors:  Chii J Chan; Wenhong Li; Gheorghe Cojoc; Jochen Guck
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8.  Impact of heating on passive and active biomechanics of suspended cells.

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