학술논문

Heterogeneous elastic response of human lung microvascular endothelial cells to barrier modulating stimuli
Document Type
article
Source
Nanomedicine Nanotechnology Biology and Medicine. 9(7)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Lung
Actins
Cell Line
Cytoskeleton
Elasticity
Endothelial Cells
Finite Element Analysis
Humans
Lysophospholipids
Microvessels
Models
Biological
Sphingosine
Stress
Mechanical
Thrombin
F-actin
Cell
AFM
FEM
Chemical Sciences
Technology
Nanoscience & Nanotechnology
Biological sciences
Chemical sciences
Language
Abstract
In this study we employ atomic force microscopy, supported by finite element analysis and fluorescence microscopy, to characterize the elastic properties accompanying cytoskeletal structural rearrangements of lung microvascular endothelial cells in response to barrier altering stimuli. Statistical analysis of elasticity data obtained from multiple cells demonstrates a heterogeneous cellular elastic response to barrier-enhancing and barrier-disrupting agents; sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) and thrombin, respectively. A small but detectable (10%) increase in the average elastic modulus of all cells is observed for S1P, which is accompanied by a corresponding significant decrease in cell thickness. Variable effects of thrombin on these parameters were observed. To account for possible substrate effects in our elasticity analysis, we analyzed only the low-force sections of the force-displacement curves and utilized a finite-thickness correction to the Hertzian model. Our finite element analysis results substantiate this approach. The heterogeneous elastic behavior correlates with differential cytoskeletal rearrangements observed with fluorescence microscopy.From the clinical editorThis team of investigators employed atomic force microscopy coupled with finite element analysis and fluorescence microscopy to characterize the elastic properties accompanying cytoskeletal structural rearrangements of lung microvascular endothelial cells in response to barrier altering stimuli, demonstrating the validity of their approach.