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1.
2.
The viscoelastic deformation of porcine aortic endothelial cells grown under static culture conditions was measured using the micropipette technique. Experiments were conducted both for control cells (mechanically or trypsin detached from the substrate) and for cells in which cytoskeletal elements were disrupted by cytochalasin B or colchicine. The time course of the aspirated length into the pipette was measured after applying a stepwise increase in aspiration pressure. To analyze the data, a standard linear viscoelastic half-space model of the endothelial cell was used. The aspirated length was expressed as an exponential function of time. The actin microfilaments were found to be the major cytoskeletal component determining the viscoelastic response of endothelial cells grown in static culture.  相似文献   

3.
K A Ward  W I Li  S Zimmer  T Davis 《Biorheology》1991,28(3-4):301-313
The micropipette aspiration technique was used to investigate the deformation properties of a panel of nontransformed and transformed rat fibroblasts derived from the same normal cell line. In this method, a step negative pressure is applied to the cell via a micropipette and the aspiration distance into the pipette as a function of time is determined using video techniques. A standard solid viscoelastic model was then used to analyze the viscoelastic properties of the cell. From these results, it is concluded that a direct correlation exists between an increase in deformability and progression of the transformed phenotype from a nontumorigenic cell line into a tumorigenic, metastatic cell line.  相似文献   

4.
This study has investigated the effect of cellular cholesterol on membrane deformability of bovine aortic endothelial cells. Cellular cholesterol content was depleted by exposing the cells to methyl-beta-cyclodextrin or enriched by exposing the cells to methyl-beta-cyclodextrin saturated with cholesterol. Control cells were treated with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin-cholesterol at a molar ratio that had no effect on the level of cellular cholesterol. Mechanical properties of the cells with different cholesterol contents were compared by measuring the degree of membrane deformation in response to a step in negative pressure applied to the membrane by a micropipette. The experiments were performed on substrate-attached cells that maintained normal morphology. The data were analyzed using a standard linear elastic half-space model to calculate Young elastic modulus. Our observations show that, in contrast to the known effect of cholesterol on membrane stiffness of lipid bilayers, cholesterol depletion of bovine aortic endothelial cells resulted in a significant decrease in membrane deformability and a corresponding increase in the value of the elastic coefficient of the membrane, indicating that cholesterol-depleted cells are stiffer than control cells. Repleting the cells with cholesterol reversed the effect. An increase in cellular cholesterol to a level higher than that of normal cells, however, had no effect on the elastic properties of bovine aortic endothelial cells. We also show that although cholesterol depletion had no apparent effect on the intensity of F-actin-specific fluorescence, disrupting F-actin with latrunculin A abrogated the stiffening effect. We suggest that cholesterol depletion increases the stiffness of the membrane by altering the properties of the submembrane F-actin and/or its attachment to the membrane.  相似文献   

5.
Binding of the plant lectin wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) to erythrocyte membranes causes membrane rigidification. One of our objectives has been to directly measure the effects of WGA binding on membrane rigidity and to relate rigidification to the kinetics and levels of WGA binding. Our other objective has been to measure the strength of adhesion and mechanics of cell separation for erythrocytes bound together by WGA. The erythrocyte membrane rigidity was measured on single cells by micropipette aspiration. The slope of the suction pressure-length data for entry into the pipette provided the measure of the membrane extensional modulus. Data were collected for cells equilibrated with WGA solutions in the range of concentrations of 0.01- 10 micrograms/ml. Erythrocyte-erythrocyte adherence properties were studied by micropipette separation of two-cell aggregates. First, a "test" cell was selected from a WGA solution by aspiration into a small micropipette, then transferred to a separate chamber that contained erythrocytes in WGA-free buffer. Here, a second cell was aspirated with another pipette and maneuvered into close proximity of the test cell surface, and adhesive contact was produced. The flaccid cell was separated from the test cell surface in steps at which the force of attachment was derived from the pipette suction pressure and cell geometry. In addition, we measured the time-dependent binding and release of fluorescently labeled WGA to single erythrocytes with a laser microfluorometry system. The results showed that the stiffening of the erythrocyte membrane and binding of fluorescently labeled WGA to the membrane surface followed the same concentration and time dependencies. The threshold concentration for membrane stiffening was at approximately 0.1 microgram/ml where the time course to reach equilibrium was close to 1 h. The maximal stiffening (almost 30-fold over the normal membrane elastic modulus) occurred in concentrations greater than 2 micrograms/ml where the time to reach equilibrium took less than 1 min. The WGA binding also altered the normal elastic membrane behavior into an inelastic, plastic-like response which indicated that mechanical extension of the membrane caused an increase in cross-linking within the surface plane. Similar to the stiffening effect, we observed that the membrane adhesivity of cells equilibrated with WGA solutions greatly increased with concentration greater than 0.1 microgram/ml.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Ohashi T  Hagiwara M  Bader DL  Knight MM 《Biorheology》2006,43(3-4):201-214
The present study utilised pipette aspiration and simultaneous confocal microscopy to test the hypothesis that chondrocyte deformation is associated with distortion of intracellular organelles and activation of calcium signalling. Aspiration pressure was applied to isolated articular chondrocytes in increments of 2 cm of water every 60 seconds up to a maximum of 10 cm of water. At each pressure increment, confocal microscopy was used to visualise the mitochondria and nucleus labelled with JC-1 and Syto-16, respectively. To investigate intracellular calcium signalling, separate cells were labelled with Fluo 4, rapidly aspirated to 5 cm of water and then imaged for 5 minutes at a tare pressure of 0.1 cm of water. Partial cell aspiration was associated with distortion of the mitochondrial network, elongation of the nucleus and movement towards the pipette mouth. Treatment with cytochalasin D or nocodazole produced an increase in cell aspiration indicating that both the actin microfilaments and microtubules provide mechanical integrity to the cell. When the data was normalised to account for the increased cell deformation, both actin microfilaments and microtubules were shown to be necessary for strain transfer to the intracellular organelles. Mitochondria and nucleus deformation may both be involved in chondrocyte mechanotransduction as well as cellular and intracellular mechanics. In addition, pipette aspiration induced intracellular calcium signalling which may also form part of a mechanotransduction pathway. Alternatively calcium mobilisation may serve to modify actin polymerisation, thereby changing cell mechanics and membrane rigidity in order to facilitate localised cell deformation. These findings have important implications for our understanding of cell mechanics and mechanotransduction as well as interpretation and modelling of pipette aspiration data.  相似文献   

7.
The curvature elastic modulus (bending stiffness) of stearoyloleoyl phosphatidylcholine (SOPC) bilayer membrane is determined from membrane tether formation experiments. R. E. Waugh and R. M. Hochmuth 1987. Biophys. J. 52:391-400) have shown that the radius of a bilayer cylinder (tether) is inversely related to the force supported along its axis. The coefficient that relates the axial force on the tether to the tether radius is the membrane bending stiffness. Thus, the bending stiffness can be calculated directly from measurements of the tether radius as a function of force. Giant (10-50-microns diam) thin-walled vesicles were aspirated into a micropipette and a tether was pulled out of the surface by gravitational forces on small glass beads that had adhered to the vesicle surface. Because the vesicle keeps constant surface area and volume, formation of the tether requires displacement of material from the projection of the vesicle in the pipette. Tethers can be made to grow longer or shorter or to maintain equilibrium by adjusting the aspiration pressure in the micropipette at constant tether force. The ratio of the change in the length of the tether to the change in the projection length is proportional to the ratio of the pipette radius to the tether radius. Thus, knowing the density and diameter of the glass beads and measuring the displacement of the projection as a function of tether length, independent determinations of the force on the tether and the tether radius were obtained. The bending stiffness for an SOPC bilayer obtained from these data is approximately 2.0 x 10(-12) dyn cm, for tether radii in the range of 20-100 nm.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Micropipette aspiration on the outer hair cell lateral wall   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The mechanical properties of the lateral wall of the guinea pig cochlear outer hair cell were studied using the micropipette aspiration technique. A fire-polished micropipette with an inner diameter of approximately 4 microm was brought into contact with the lateral wall and negative pressure was applied. The resulting deformation of the lateral wall was recorded on videotape and subjected to morphometric analysis. The relation between the length of the aspirated portion of the cell and aspiration pressure is characterized by the stiffness parameter, K(s) = 1.07 +/- 0.24 (SD) dyn/cm (n = 14). Values of K(s) do not correlate with the original cell length, which ranges from 29 to 74 microm. Theoretical analysis based on elastic shell theory applied to the experimental data yields an estimate of the effective elastic shear modulus, mu = 15.4 +/- 3.3 dyn/cm. These data were obtained at subcritical aspiration pressures, typically less than 10 cm H2O. After reaching a critical (vesiculation) pressure, the cytoplasmic membrane appeared to separate from the underlying structures, a vesicle with a length of 10-20 microm was formed, and the cytoplasmic membrane resealed. This vesiculation process was repeated until a cell-specific limit was reached and no more vesicles were formed. Over 20 vesicles were formed from the longest cells in the experiment.  相似文献   

9.
The membrane shear elastic modulus (mu) and the time constant for extensional shape recovery (tc) were measured for normal, control human red blood cells (RBC) and for RBC heat treated (HT) at 48 degrees C. Three separate methods for the measurement of mu were compared (two used a micropipette and one employed a flow channel), and the membrane viscosity (n) was calculated from the relation n = mu. tc. The deformability of HT and control cells was evaluated using micropipette techniques, and the bulk viscosity of RBC suspensions at 40% hematocrit was measured. The shear elastic modulus, or "membrane rigidity", was more than doubled by heat treatment, although both the absolute value for mu and the estimate of the increase induced by heat treatment varied depending on the method of measurement. Heat treatment caused smaller increases in membrane viscosity and in membrane bending resistance, and only minimal changes in cell geometry. The deformability of HT cells was reduced: 1) the pressure required for cell entry (Pe) into 3 micrometers pipettes was increased, on average, by 170%; 2) at an aspiration pressure (Pa) exceeding Pe, longer times were required for cell entry into the same pipettes. However, when Pa was scaled relative to the mean entry pressure for a given sample (i.e, Pa/Pe), entry times were similar for control and HT cells. Bulk viscosity of HT RBC suspensions was elevated by approximately 12% on average (shear rates 75 to 1500 inverse seconds). These findings suggest that alteration of RBC membrane mechanical properties, similar to those induced by heat treatment, would most affect the in vivo circulation in regions where vessel dimensions are smaller than cellular diameters.  相似文献   

10.
Physical forces can elicit complex time- and space-dependent deformations in living cells. These deformations at the subcellular level are difficult to measure but can be estimated using computational approaches such as finite element (FE) simulation. Existing FE models predominantly treat cells as spring-dashpot viscoelastic materials, while broad experimental data are now lending support to the power-law rheology (PLR) model. Here, we developed a large deformation FE model that incorporated PLR and experimentally verified this model by performing micropipette aspiration on fibroblasts under various mechanical loadings. With a single set of rheological properties, this model recapitulated the diverse micropipette aspiration data obtained using three protocols and with a range of micropipette sizes. More intriguingly, our analysis revealed that decreased pipette size leads to increased pressure gradient, potentially explaining our previous counterintuitive finding that decreased pipette size leads to increased incidence of cell blebbing and injury. Taken together, our work leads to more accurate rheological interpretation of micropipette aspiration experiments than previous models and suggests pressure gradient as a potential determinant of cell injury.  相似文献   

11.
The behavior of human neutrophils during flow through capillary pores   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The passage times of individual human neutrophils through single capillary-sized pores in polycarbonate membranes were measured with the resistive pulse technique, and results were compared to those obtained from the micropipette aspiration of entire cells. Pore transit measurement serves as a useful means to screen populations of cells, and allows for protocols that measure time dependent changes to the population. Neutrophils exhibited a highly linear pressure/flow rate relationship at aspiration pressures from 200 Pa to 1,500 Pa in both the pore and pipette systems. Cellular viscosity, as determined by the method of Hochmuth and Needham, was 89.0 Pa.s for the pore systems and 134.9 Pa.s for the pipette systems. These results are in general agreement with recent values of neutrophil viscosity published in the literature. Extrapolation of the observed linear flow response revealed an apparent minimum pressure for whole cell aspiration significantly above the threshold pressure predicted by Evans' liquid drop model. However, whole cell aspiration was achieved in both the pore and pipette systems at pressures below this extrapolated minimum, although the calculated cellular viscosity was greatly increased. The implications of these two regimes of cell deformation is unclear. This behavior could be explained by shear thinning of the material in the cell body. However the origin of this phenomenon may be in the cortical region of the cell, which exhibits an elastic tension that may be deformation rate dependent.  相似文献   

12.
K G Engstr?m  B M?ller  H J Meiselman 《Blood cells》1992,18(2):241-57; discussion 258-65
Although red blood cell (RBC) geometry has been extensively studied by micropipette aspiration, the small size of RBC and pipettes vs. the optical resolution of light microscopy suggests the need to consider potential errors. The present study addressed such difficulties and investigated four specific problems: (1) use of exact equations to calculate RBC membrane area and volume; (2) calibration of the pipette internal diameter (PID); (3) correction for a noncylindrical pipette barrel; (4) diffraction distortion of the RBC image. The observed PID represents a cylinder lens enlargement that can be theoretically derived from the glass/buffer refractive index ratio (1.49/1.33 = 1.12). This enlargement was experimentally confirmed by: (1) studying pipettes bent to allow measurement through the barrel (horizontal) and at the orifice (vertical), with a resulting diameter ratio of 1.12 +/- 0.01; (2) and by replacing the surrounding buffer with immersion oil and hence abolishing the lens phenomenon (ratio = 1.12 +/- 0.02). In addition, use of aspirated oil droplets demonstrated a 3.2 +/- 0.2% error when the PID is focused at a sharp, maximum diameter. The average pipette cone angle was 1.49 +/- 0.09 degrees and varied considerably with pipette pulling procedures; calculated tongue geometry inside the pipette was affected by the noncylindrical pipette barrel. The RBC diffraction error, demonstrated by touching two aspirated cells held by opposing pipettes, was 0.091 +/- 0.002 microns. The PID, cone angle, and diffraction artifacts significantly (p < 0.001) affected calculated RBC geometry (average errors up to 5.4% for area and 9.6% for volume). Two new methods to calculate, rather than directly measure, the PID from images of a single RBC, during either osmotic or pressure manipulation, were evaluated; the osmotic method closely predicted the PID, whereas the pressure method markedly underestimated the PID. Our results thus confirm the need to consider the above-mentioned phenomena when determining RBC geometric parameters via micropipette aspiration.  相似文献   

13.
Micropipette aspiration is a potentially useful and accurate technique to measure red blood cell (RBC) geometry. Individual RBCs are partially aspirated and from the resulting sphere diameter, total cell length, and pipette diameter, membrane area and cell volume can be calculated. In this study we have focused on possible shape artifacts associated with the aspirated portion of RBC. We observed that the apparent RBC geometry (calculated area and volume) changed markedly (P < 0.001) with the applied aspiration pressure; for normal human RBC the area increased by 5.6 +/- 0.6% and volume decreased by 4.7 +/- 0.6% when the aspiration pressure was increased from 20 to 100 mm water. The calculated membrane area dilation modulus was 7.4 dyn/ cm, which is far below the expected value, and microscopic observations revealed a membrane folding artifact as a possible artifact. These assumptions were strengthened by using a short-duration (3 s) pressure peak of 20-100-20 mm water. The folding then disappeared permanently, but a small (0.31 +/- 0.09%; P < 0.001) area decrease was detected which yields a realistic dilation modulus of 215 dyn/cm. We conclude that membrane folding can critically affect RBC micropipette measurements and that a transient pressure peak can unfold the RBC membrane, thus allowing accurate measurements of RBC geometry.  相似文献   

14.
The deformability of the surface membranes of Sarcoma 37 and Ehrlich murine ascites tumor cells was assessed by the pressure required to suck a hemispherical bulge from these cells into a micropipette. It was shown that treatment with neuraminidase allowed the cells to be deformed with significantly less suction, and that enzymatic treatment also produced a significant reduction in surface charge as determined by measurement of cellular electrophoretic mobility. It is suggested that the increase in cellular deformability may be related to charge reduction, and that the charge at the cell periphery may affect not only the magnitude of the potential energy barriers hindering contact between cells, but also the ease with which cells can form low radius of curvature probes in order to help overcome these barriers.  相似文献   

15.
We used micropipettes to aspirate leading and trailing edges of wild-type and mutant cells of Dictyostelium discoideum. Mutants were lacking either myosin II or talin, or both proteins simultaneously. Talin is a plasma membrane-associated protein important for the coupling between membrane and actin cortex, whereas myosin II is a cytoplasmic motor protein essential for the locomotion of Dictyostelium cells. Aspiration into the pipette occurred above a threshold pressure only. For all cells containing talin this threshold was significantly lower at the leading edge of an advancing cell as compared to its rear end, whereas we found no such difference in cells lacking talin. Wild-type and talin-deficient cells were able to retract from the pipette against an applied suction pressure. In these cells, retraction was preceded by an accumulation of myosin II in the tip of the aspirated cell lobe. Mutants lacking myosin II could not retract, even if the suction pressures were removed after aspiration. We interpreted the initial instability and the subsequent plastic deformation of the cell surface during aspiration in terms of a fracture between the cell plasma membrane and the cell body, which may involve destruction of part of the cortex. Models are presented that characterize the coupling strength between membrane and cell body by a surface energy sigma. We find sigma approximately 0.6(1.6) mJ/m(2) at the leading (trailing) edge of wild-type cells.  相似文献   

16.
Cloned mice derived from somatic cell nuclei   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Hosaka K  Ohi S  Ando A  Kobayashi M  Sato K 《Human cell》2000,13(4):237-242
In 1997, a cloned sheep "Dolly" was produced by nuclear transfer of somatic cell. The first birth of cloned mice derived from some somatic cells were succeeded in 1998. At present, it is shown that somatic cells, cumulus cells, fibroblasts and Sertoli cells can be used to the study of cloned animal as nuclear donor. In this study investigation was designed to compare with efficiency on the production of cloned embryos by using the microinjection and the electrofusion methods for nuclear transfer. Oocyte enucleation was performed with a micromanipulator. The oocyte was held by holding pipette, and was enucleated using a beveled pipette. Microinjection method: Cell's nucleus injection was carried out by piezo-micromanipulator. Cytochalasin B treated cumulus cell was aspirated into a injection pipette, and was broken its plasma membrane using the injection pipette. Then, the cumulus cell was injected into the enucleated ooplasm directly. Electrofusion method: The cell was aspirated into a beveled pipette, and then an aspirated cell was inserted into perivitelline space. Then, the pair of enucleated oocyte and cell was fused using electrical cell fusion apparatus. The reconstituted embryos were activated after nuclear transfer using St2+. Reconstituted embryos had been produced by the microinjection showed the embryonic development to over 8-cell stages. But, the rate of fragmentation of reconstituted embryos by the microinjection showed a little high rate in comparison with the electrofusion. When some reconstituted embryos by the microinjection were transplanted to pseudopregnant females' oviduct, 9 fetuses were observed at 14 days post coitum.  相似文献   

17.
Stability analysis of micropipette aspiration of neutrophils   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
During micropipette aspiration, neutrophil leukocytes exhibit a liquid-drop behavior, i.e., if a neutrophil is aspirated by a pressure larger than a certain threshold pressure, it flows continuously into the pipette. The point of the largest aspiration pressure at which the neutrophil can still be held in a stable equilibrium is called the critical point of aspiration. Here, we present a theoretical analysis of the equilibrium behavior and stability of a neutrophil during micropipette aspiration with the aim to rigorously characterize the critical point. We take the energy minimization approach, in which the critical point is well defined as the point of the stability breakdown. We use the basic liquid-drop model of neutrophil rheology extended by considering also the neutrophil elastic area expansivity. Our analysis predicts that the behavior at large pipette radii or small elastic area expansivity is close to the one predicted by the basic liquid-drop model, where the critical point is attained slightly before the projection length reaches the pipette radius. The effect of elastic area expansivity is qualitatively different at smaller pipette radii, where our analysis predicts that the critical point is attained at the projection lengths that may significantly exceed the pipette radius.  相似文献   

18.
A two-dimensional elastomer material concept of the red cell membrane is applied to the analysis of fluid shear-deformed, point-attached red cells and micropipette aspiration of red cell disks. The elastic constant (corresponding to the “shear” modulus multiplied by the membrane thickness) is of the order 10-2 dyn/cm for both cases. Additional experimental observations are in agreement with the membrane model, e.g. teardrop and “tether” formation of the sheared disks, pressure difference vs. aspirated length of the cell for micropipette experiments, etc  相似文献   

19.
Bone adapts to its environment by a process in which osteoblasts and osteocytes sense applied mechanical strain. One possible pathway for the detection of strain involves mechanosensitive channels and we sought to determine their sensitivity to membrane strain and tension. We used a combination of experimental and computational modeling techniques to gain new insights into cell mechanics and the regulation of mechanosensitive channels. Using patch-clamp electrophysiology combined with video microscopy, we recorded simultaneously the evolution of membrane extensions into the micropipette, applied pressure, and membrane currents. Nonselective mechanosensitive cation channels with a conductance of 15 pS were observed. Bleb aspiration into the micropipette was simulated using finite element models incorporating the cytoplasm, the actin cortex, the plasma membrane, cellular stiffening in response to strain, and adhesion between the membrane and the micropipette. Using this model, we examine the relative importance of the different cellular components in resisting suction into the pipette and estimate the membrane strains and tensions needed to open mechanosensitive channels. Radial membrane strains of 800% and tensions of 5 10(-4) N.m(-1) were needed to open 50% of mechanosensitive channels. We discuss the relevance of these results in the understanding of cellular reactions to mechanical strain and bone physiology.  相似文献   

20.
The technique of Mitchison and Swann (1954) was modified for determining the resistance to deformation, or “stiffness,” of the red cell membrane and the pressure gradient across the cell wall. It requires a measure of the pressure needed to suck a portion of the cell into a micropipette. Stiffness of hypertonically crenated cells was less than that of biconcave discs or hypotonically swollen cells. Crenated cells showed zero pressure gradient and a stiffness, probably due to pure bending, equivalent to 0.007 ± 0.001 (SE) dynes/cm. Normal and swollen cells showed a pressure gradient of 2.3 ± 0.8 (SE) mm H2O and a stiffness, due to bending and tension in the membrane, equivalent to 0.019 ± 0.002 (SE) dynes/cm. No difference in stiffness was found between the rim and the biconcavity of the cell or between biconcave discs and hypotonically swollen cells. Micromanipulation showed that the membrane can withstand large bending strains but limited tangential strains (stretching). These results have significant implications in any theory explaining the cell shape. For example, the data give no indication that the physical properties of the membrane are different at the rim from those of the biconcavities, and the existence of a positive pressure in the normal cell is established.  相似文献   

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