학술논문

Tracking Mechanical Stress and Cell Migration with Inexpensive Polymer Thin‐Film Sensors
Document Type
article
Source
Advanced Materials Interfaces. 10(2)
Subject
Engineering
Materials Engineering
Bioengineering
cell migration
mechanochromism
polydiacetylenes
slime mold
surface forces apparatus
Cell migration
Mechanochromism
Polydiacetylenes
Slime Mold
Surface Forces Apparatus
Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural)
Macromolecular and materials chemistry
Materials engineering
Condensed matter physics
Language
Abstract
Polydiacetylene (PDA) Langmuir films are well known for their blue to red chromatic transitions in response to a variety of stimuli, including UV light, heat, bio-molecule bindings and mechanical stress. In this work, we detail the ability to tune PDA Langmuir films to exhibit discrete chromatic transitions in response to applied mechanical stress. Normal and shear-induced transitions were quantified using the Surface Forces Apparatus and established to be binary and tunable as a function of film formation conditions. Both monomer alkyl tail length and metal cations were used to manipulate the chromatic transition force threshold to enable discrete force sensing from ~50 to ~500 nN μm-2 for normal loading and ~2 to ~40 nN μm-2 for shear-induced transitions, which are appropriate for biological cells. The utility of PDA thin-film sensors was demonstrated with the slime mold Physarum polycephalum. The fluorescence readout of the films enabled: the area explored by Physarum to be visualized, the forces involved in locomotion to be quantified, and revealed novel puncta formation potentially associated with Physarum sampling its environment.