Measurement of Spatiotemporal Intracellular Deformation of Cells Adhered to Collagen Matrix During Freezing of Biomaterials

Author:

Ghosh Soham1,Craig Dutton J.2,Han Bumsoo3

Affiliation:

1. School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47906

2. Department of Aerospace Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801

3. School of Mechanical Engineering, Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47906 e-mail:

Abstract

Preservation of structural integrity inside cells and at cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interfaces is a key challenge during freezing of biomaterials. Since the post-thaw functionality of cells depends on the extent of change in the cytoskeletal structure caused by complex cell-ECM adhesion, spatiotemporal deformation inside the cell was measured using a newly developed microbead-mediated particle tracking deformetry (PTD) technique using fibroblast-seeded dermal equivalents as a model tissue. Fibronectin-coated 500 nm diameter microbeads were internalized in cells, and the microbead-labeled cells were used to prepare engineered tissue with type I collagen matrices. After a 24 h incubation the engineered tissues were directionally frozen, and the cells were imaged during the process. The microbeads were tracked, and spatiotemporal deformation inside the cells was computed from the tracking data using the PTD method. Effects of particle size on the deformation measurement method were tested, and it was found that microbeads represent cell deformation to acceptable accuracy. The results showed complex spatiotemporal deformation patterns in the cells. Large deformation in the cells and detachments of cells from the ECM were observed. At the cellular scale, variable directionality of the deformation was found in contrast to the one-dimensional deformation pattern observed at the tissue scale, as found from earlier studies. In summary, this method can quantify the spatiotemporal deformation in cells and can be correlated to the freezing-induced change in the structure of cytosplasm and of the cell-ECM interface. As a broader application, this method may be used to compute deformation of cells in the ECM environment for physiological processes, namely cell migration, stem cell differentiation, vasculogenesis, and cancer metastasis, which have relevance to quantify mechanotransduction.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

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