학술논문

Exploring the elasticity and adhesion behavior of cardiac fibroblasts by atomic force microscopy indentation
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Engineering
Materials Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Animals
Cell Adhesion
Cells
Cultured
Cytochalasins
Cytoskeleton
Elasticity
Fibroblasts
Mice
Microscopy
Atomic Force
Myocytes
Cardiac
Cell
Adhesion
Cardiac fibroblast
AFM
Biomedical engineering
Materials engineering
Language
Abstract
AFM was used to collect the whole force-deformation cell curves. They provide both the elasticity and adhesion behavior of mouse primary cardiac fibroblasts. To confirm the hypothesis that a link exists between the membrane receptors and the cytoskeletal filaments causing therefore changing in both elasticity and adhesion behavior, actin-destabilizing Cytochalsin D was administrated to the fibroblasts. From immunofluorescence observation and AFM loading/unloading curves, cytoskeletal reorganization as well as a change in the elasticity and adhesion was indeed observed. Elasticity of control fibroblasts is three times higher than that for fibroblasts treated with 0.5 μM Cytochalasin. Moreover, AFM loading-unloading curves clearly show the different mechanical behavior of the two different cells analyzed: (i) for control cells the AFM cantilever rises during the dwell time while cells with Cytochalasin fail to show such an active resistance; (ii) the maximum force to deform control cells is quite higher and as far as adhesion is concern (iii) the maximum separation force, detachment area and the detachment process time are much larger for control compared to the Cytochalasin treated cells. Therefore, alterations in the cytoskeleton suggest that a link must exist between the membrane receptors and the cytoskeletal filaments beneath the cellular surface and inhibition of actin polymerization has effects on the whole cell mechanical behavior as well as adhesion.