Abstract
AbstractThe mechanical phenotype of the cell is critical for survival following deformations due to confinement and fluid flow. One idea is that cancer cells are plastic and adopt different mechanical phenotypes under different geometries that aid in their survival. Thus, an attractive goal, is to disrupt the cancer cells’ ability to adopt multiple mechanical states. To begin to address this question, we aimed to quantify the diversity of these mechanical states usingin vitrobiomimetics to mimicin vivo2D and 3D extracellular matrix environments. Here, we used two modalities Brillouin microscopy (∼GHz) and broadband frequency (3-15kHz) optical tweezer microrheology to measure microscale cell mechanics. We measured the response of intracellular mechanics of cancer cells cultured in 2D and 3D environments where we modified substrate stiffness, dimensionality (2D versus 3D), and presence of fibrillar topography. We determined that there was good agreement between two modalities despite the difference in timescale of the two measurements. These findings on cell mechanical phenotype in different environments confirm a correlation between modalities that employ different mechanisms at different temporal scales (Hz-kHz vs. GHz). We also determined that observed heterogeneity in cell shape that is more closely linked to the cells’ mechanical state. We also determined that individual cells in multicellular spheroids exhibit a lower degree of mechanical heterogeneity when compared to single cells cultured in monodisperse 3D cultures. Moreover, the observed decreased heterogeneity among cells in spheroids suggested that there is mechanical cooperativity between cells that make up a single spheroid.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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