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Calcium response in single osteocytes to locally applied mechanical stimulus: Differences in cell process and cell body
Authors:Taiji Adachi   Yuki Aonuma   Mototsugu Tanaka   Masaki Hojo   Teruko Takano-Yamamoto  Hiroshi Kamioka
Affiliation:1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Fourth Military Medical University, Xi''an, Shaanxi 710032, China;2. Bone Bioengineering Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA;3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA;4. Laboratory for Intelligent Imaging and Neural Computing, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA
Abstract:It is proposed that osteocytes embedded in the bone matrix have the ability to sense deformation and/or damage to the matrix and to feed these mechanical signals back to the adaptive bone remodeling process. When osteoblasts differentiate into osteocytes during the bone formation process, they change their morphology to a stellate form with many slender processes. This characteristic cell shape may underlie the differences in mechanosensitivity between the cell processes and cell body. To elucidate the mechanism of cellular response to mechanical stimulus in osteocytes, we investigated the site-dependent response to quantitatively controlled local mechanical stimulus in single osteocytes isolated from chick embryos, using the technique of calcium imaging. A mechanical stimulus was applied to a single osteocyte using a glass microneedle targeting a microparticle adhered to the cell membrane by modification with a monoclonal antibody OB7.3. Application of the local deformation induced calcium transients in the vicinity of the stimulated point and caused diffusive wave propagation of the calcium transient to the entire intracellular region. The rate of cell response to the stimulus was higher when applied to the cell processes than when applied to the cell body. In addition, a large deformation was necessary at the cell body to induce calcium transients, whereas a relatively small deformation was sufficient at the cell processes, suggesting that the mechanosensitivity of the cell processes was higher than that of the cell body. These results suggest that the cell shape with slender processes contributes to the site-dependent mechanosensitivity in osteocytes.
Keywords:Osteocytes   Bone cells   Calcium signaling response   Mechanical stimulus   Mechanotransduction   Cell biomechanics
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