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The effect of the physical properties of the substrate on the kinetics of cell adhesion and crawling studied by an axisymmetric diffusion-energy balance coupled model

Samadi Dooki, A ; Sharif University of Technology | 2015

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  1. Type of Document: Article
  2. DOI: 10.1039/c5sm00394f
  3. Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry , 2015
  4. Abstract:
  5. In this paper an analytical approach to study the effect of the substrate physical properties on the kinetics of adhesion and motility behavior of cells is presented. Cell adhesion is mediated by the binding of cell wall receptors and substrate's complementary ligands, and tight adhesion is accomplished by the recruitment of the cell wall binders to the adhesion zone. The binders' movement is modeled as their axisymmetric diffusion in the fluid-like cell membrane. In order to preserve the thermodynamic consistency, the energy balance for the cell-substrate interaction is imposed on the diffusion equation. Solving the axisymmetric diffusion-energy balance coupled equations, it turns out that the physical properties of the substrate (substrate's ligand spacing and stiffness) have considerable effects on the cell adhesion and motility kinetics. For a rigid substrate with uniform distribution of immobile ligands, the maximum ligand spacing which does not interrupt adhesion growth is found to be about 57 nm. It is also found that as a consequence of the reduction in the energy dissipation in the isolated adhesion system, cell adhesion is facilitated by increasing substrate's stiffness. Moreover, the directional movement of cells on a substrate with gradients in mechanical compliance is explored with an extension of the adhesion formulation. It is shown that cells tend to move from soft to stiff regions of the substrate, but their movement is decelerated as the stiffness of the substrate increases. These findings based on the proposed theoretical model are in excellent agreement with the previous experimental observations
  6. Keywords:
  7. Binders ; Cell adhesion ; Cell membranes ; Cells ; Diffusion ; Energy balance ; Energy dissipation ; Kinetics ; Ligands ; Physical properties ; Stiffness ; Substrates ; Analytical approach ; Cell-substrate interactions ; Diffusion equations ; Directional movements ; Mechanical compliance ; Theoretical modeling ; Thermodynamic consistency ; Uniform distribution ; Cytology
  8. Source: Soft Matter ; Volume 11, Issue 18 , Mar , 2015 , Pages 3693-3705 ; 1744683X (ISSN)
  9. URL: http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2015/SM/C5SM00394F