Article Ultimately Adaptive Fluid Interfacial Phospholipid Membranes Unveiled Unanticipated High Cellular Mechanical Work

Zhou Lu ; Mizuki Tenjimbayashi SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials Science) ; Junhong Zhou SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials Science) ; Jun Nakanishi SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials Science)

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Citation
Zhou Lu, Mizuki Tenjimbayashi, Junhong Zhou, Jun Nakanishi. Ultimately Adaptive Fluid Interfacial Phospholipid Membranes Unveiled Unanticipated High Cellular Mechanical Work. Advanced Materials. 2024, 36 (27), . https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202403396
SAMURAI

Description:

(abstract)

Living cells actively interact biochemically and mechanically with the surrounding extracellular matrices (ECMs) and undergo dramatic morphological and dimensional transitions, concomitantly remodeling ECMs. However, there is no suitable method to quantitatively discuss the contribution of mechanical interactions in such mutually adaptive processes. Herein, a highly deformable “living” cellular scaffold is developed to evaluate overall mechanical energy transfer between cell and ECMs. It is based on the water–perfluorocarbon interface decorated with phospholipids bearing a cell-adhesive ligand and fluorescent tag. The bioinert nature of the phospholipid membranes prevents the formation of solid-like protein nanofilms at the fluid interface, enabling to visualize and quantify cellular mechanical work against the ultimately adaptive model ECM. A new cellular wetting regime is identified, wherein interface deformation proceeds to cell flattening, followed by its eventual restoration. The cellular mechanical work during this adaptive wetting process is one order of magnitude higher than those reported with conventional elastic platforms. The behavior of viscous liquid drops at the air–water interface can simulate cellular adaptive wetting, suggesting that overall viscoelasticity of the cell body predominates the emergent wetting regime and regulates mechanical output. Cellular-force-driven high-energy states on the adaptive platform can be useful for cell fate manipulation.

Rights:

Keyword: Mechanobiology, Cell adhesion, Fluid, Viscoelasticity, Wetting

Date published: 2024-04-29

Publisher: Wiley

Journal:

  • Advanced Materials (ISSN: 09359648) vol. 36 issue. 27

Funding:

  • Japan Society for the Promotion of Science 21H01643
  • Japan Society for the Promotion of Science 22H00596
  • Japan Society for the Promotion of Science 23K17481

Manuscript type: Publisher's version (Version of record)

MDR DOI:

First published URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202403396

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Updated at: 2024-07-12 16:30:25 +0900

Published on MDR: 2024-07-12 16:30:25 +0900

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