Substrate Stiffness Affects Human Keratinocyte Colony Formation

被引:0
作者
Hoda Zarkoob
Sandeep Bodduluri
Sailahari V. Ponnaluri
John C. Selby
Edward A. Sander
机构
[1] The University of Iowa,Department of Biomedical Engineering
[2] The University of Iowa,Department of Dermatology, Carver College of Medicine
来源
Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering | 2015年 / 8卷
关键词
Epithelial sheet; Traction microscopy; Polyacrylamide; Mechanosensing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Restoration of epidermal organization and function in response to a variety of pathophysiological insults is critically dependent on coordinated keratinocyte migration, proliferation, and stratification during the process of wound healing. These processes are mediated by the reconfiguration of both cell–cell (desmosomes, adherens junctions) and cell–matrix (focal adhesions, hemidesmosomes) junctions and the cytoskeletal filament networks that they serve to interconnect. In this study, we investigated the role of substrate elasticity (stiffness) on keratinocyte colony formation in vitro during the process of nascent epithelial sheet formation as triggered by the calcium switch model of keratinocyte culture. Keratinocytes cultured on pepsin digested type I collagen coated soft (nominal E = 1.2 kPa) polyacrylamide gels embedded with fluorescent microspheres exhibited (i) smaller spread contact areas, (ii) increased migration velocities, and (iii) increased rates of colony formation with more cells per colony than did keratinocytes cultured on stiff (nominal E = 24 kPa) polyacrylamide gels. As assessed by tracking of embedded microsphere displacements, keratinocytes cultured on soft substrates generated large local substrate deformations that appeared to recruit adjacent keratinocytes into joining an evolving colony. Together with the observed differences in keratinocyte kinematics and substrate deformations, we developed two ad hoc analyses, termed distance rank and radius of cooperativity, that help to objectively ascribe what we perceive as increasingly cooperative behavior of keratinocytes cultured on soft vs. stiff gels during the process of colony formation. We hypothesize that the differences in keratinocyte colony formation observed in our experiments could be due to cell–cell mechanical signaling generated via local substrate deformations that appear to be correlated with the increased expression of β4 integrin within keratinocytes positioned along the periphery of an evolving cell colony.
引用
收藏
页码:32 / 50
页数:18
相关论文
共 170 条
[1]  
Achterberg VF(2014)The nano-scale mechanical properties of the extracellular matrix regulate dermal fibroblast function J. Invest. Dermatol. 134 1862-1872
[2]  
Buscemi L(2012)Cell crawling mediates collective cell migration to close undamaged epithelial gaps Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 109 10891-10896
[3]  
Diekmann H(2009)Nonlinear elastic properties of polyacrylamide gels: implications for quantification of cellular forces Biorheology 46 191-205
[4]  
Smith-Clerc J(2002)Traction fields, moments, and strain energy that cells exert on their surroundings Am. J. Physiol. Cell Physiol. 282 C595-C605
[5]  
Schwengler H(1999)Comparison of chemical cleaning methods of glass in preparation for silanization Biosensors Bioelectron. 14 683-688
[6]  
Meister JJ(2009)One-dimensional topography underlies three-dimensional fibrillar cell migration J. Cell Biol. 184 481-490
[7]  
Anon E(2013)Epithelial mechanobiology, skin wound healing, and the stem cell niche J. Mech. Behav. Biomed. Mater. 28 397-409
[8]  
Serra-Picamal X(2006)Focal adhesion size controls tension-dependent recruitment of alpha-smooth muscle actin to stress fibers J. Cell. Biol. 172 259-268
[9]  
Hersen P(1995)Changes in the concentrations of extracellular Mg J. Invest. Dermatol. 104 768-774
[10]  
Gauthier NC(2006) and Ca Biophys. J. 90 2213-2220