A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Directing Multicellular Organization by Varying the Aspect Ratio of Soft Hydrogel Microwells
Multicellular organization with precise spatial definition is essential to various biological processes, including morphogenesis, development, and healing in vascular and other tissues. Gradients and patterns of chemoattractants are well‐described guides of multicellular organization, but the influences of 3D geometry of soft hydrogels are less well defined. Here, the discovery of a new mode of endothelial cell self‐organization guided by combinatorial effects of stiffness and geometry, independent of protein or chemical patterning, is described. Endothelial cells in 2 kPa microwells are found to be ≈30 times more likely to migrate to the edge to organize in ring‐like patterns than in stiff 35 kPa microwells. This organization is independent of curvature and significantly more pronounced in 2 kPa microwells with aspect ratio (perimeter/depth) < 25. Physical factors of cells and substrates that drive this behavior are systematically investigated and a mathematical model that explains the organization by balancing the dynamic interaction between tangential cytoskeletal tension, cell–cell, and cell–substrate adhesion is presented. These findings demonstrate the importance of combinatorial effects of geometry and stiffness in complex cellular organization that can be leveraged to facilitate the engineering of bionics and integrated model organoid systems with customized nutrient vascular networks.
Directing Multicellular Organization by Varying the Aspect Ratio of Soft Hydrogel Microwells
Multicellular organization with precise spatial definition is essential to various biological processes, including morphogenesis, development, and healing in vascular and other tissues. Gradients and patterns of chemoattractants are well‐described guides of multicellular organization, but the influences of 3D geometry of soft hydrogels are less well defined. Here, the discovery of a new mode of endothelial cell self‐organization guided by combinatorial effects of stiffness and geometry, independent of protein or chemical patterning, is described. Endothelial cells in 2 kPa microwells are found to be ≈30 times more likely to migrate to the edge to organize in ring‐like patterns than in stiff 35 kPa microwells. This organization is independent of curvature and significantly more pronounced in 2 kPa microwells with aspect ratio (perimeter/depth) < 25. Physical factors of cells and substrates that drive this behavior are systematically investigated and a mathematical model that explains the organization by balancing the dynamic interaction between tangential cytoskeletal tension, cell–cell, and cell–substrate adhesion is presented. These findings demonstrate the importance of combinatorial effects of geometry and stiffness in complex cellular organization that can be leveraged to facilitate the engineering of bionics and integrated model organoid systems with customized nutrient vascular networks.
Directing Multicellular Organization by Varying the Aspect Ratio of Soft Hydrogel Microwells
Pahapale, Gayatri J. (author) / Tao, Jiaxiang (author) / Nikolic, Milos (author) / Gao, Sammy (author) / Scarcelli, Giuliano (author) / Sun, Sean X. (author) / Romer, Lewis H. (author) / Gracias, David H. (author)
Advanced Science ; 9
2022-06-01
13 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Flexible Fabrication of Microarrays of Microwells
British Library Online Contents | 2007
|Evaluation of Open Channel Flow with Varying Aspect Ratio and Roughness Ratio
British Library Online Contents | 1993
|Cyclic Testing of Exterior Beam-Column Joints with Varying Joint Aspect Ratio
Online Contents | 2014
|British Library Online Contents | 2008
|