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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Complex thermorheology of living cells

Schmidt, Sebastian, Kießling, Tobias, Warmt, Enrico, Fritsch, Anatol, Stange, Roland, Käs, Josef A. 13 July 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Temperature has a reliable and nearly instantaneous influence on mechanical responses of cells. As recently published, MCF-10A normal epithelial breast cells follow the time-temperature superposition (TTS) principle. Here, we measured thermorheological behaviour of eight common cell types within physiologically relevant temperatures and applied TTS to creep compliance curves. Our results showed that superposition is not universal and was seen in four of the eight investigated cell types. For the other cell types, transitions of thermorheological responses were observed at 36 °C. Activation energies (EA) were calculated for all cell types and ranged between 50 and 150 kJ mol-1. The scaling factors of the superposition of creep curves were used to group the cell lines into three categories. They were dependent on relaxation processes as well as structural composition of the cells in response to mechanical load and temperature increase. This study supports the view that temperature is a vital parameter for comparing cell rheological data and should be precisely controlled when designing experiments.
2

Complex thermorheology of living cells

Schmidt, Sebastian, Kießling, Tobias, Warmt, Enrico, Fritsch, Anatol, Stange, Roland, Käs, Josef A. January 2015 (has links)
Temperature has a reliable and nearly instantaneous influence on mechanical responses of cells. As recently published, MCF-10A normal epithelial breast cells follow the time-temperature superposition (TTS) principle. Here, we measured thermorheological behaviour of eight common cell types within physiologically relevant temperatures and applied TTS to creep compliance curves. Our results showed that superposition is not universal and was seen in four of the eight investigated cell types. For the other cell types, transitions of thermorheological responses were observed at 36 °C. Activation energies (EA) were calculated for all cell types and ranged between 50 and 150 kJ mol-1. The scaling factors of the superposition of creep curves were used to group the cell lines into three categories. They were dependent on relaxation processes as well as structural composition of the cells in response to mechanical load and temperature increase. This study supports the view that temperature is a vital parameter for comparing cell rheological data and should be precisely controlled when designing experiments.
3

Complex thermorheology of living cells

Schmidt, Sebastian, Kießling, Tobias R., Warmt, Enrico, Fritsch, Anatol W., Stange, R., Käs, Josef A. 12 August 2022 (has links)
Temperature has a reliable and nearly instantaneous influence onmechanical responses of cells.As recently published, MCF-10Anormal epithelial breast cells follow the time–temperature superposition (TTS) principle. Here,wemeasured thermorheological behaviour of eightcommoncell types within physiologically relevant temperatures and appliedTTS to creep compliance curves.Our results showed that superposition is not universal and was seen in four of the eight investigated cell types. For the other cell types, transitions of thermorheological responses were observed at 36 °C.Activation energies (EA)were calculated for all cell types and ranged between 50 and 150 kJmol−1.The scaling factors of the superposition of creep curves were used to group the cell lines into three categories. They were dependent on relaxation processes aswell as structural composition of the cells in response tomechanical load and temperature increase.This study supports the view that temperature is a vital parameter for comparing cell rheological data and should be precisely controlledwhen designing experiments.
4

Thermorheology of living cells: impact of temperature variations on cell mechanics

Kießling, Tobias R., Stange, Roland, Käs, Josef A., Fritsch, Anatol W. 16 August 2022 (has links)
Upon temperature changes, we observe a systematic shift of creep compliance curves J (t) for single living breast epithelial cells. We use a dual-beam laser trap (optical stretcher) to induce temperature jumps within milliseconds, while simultaneously measuring the mechanical response of whole cells to optical force. The cellular mechanical response was found to differ between sudden temperature changes compared to slow, long-term changes implying adaptation of cytoskeletal structure. Interpreting optically induced cell deformation as a thermorheological experiment allows us to consistently explain data on the basis of time–temperature superposition, well known from classical polymer physics. Measured time shift factors give access to the activation energy of the viscous flow of MCF-10A breast cells, which was determined to be 80 kJ mol−1. The presented measurements highlight the fundamental role that temperature plays for the deformability of cellular matter. We propose thermorheology as a powerful concept to assess the inherent material properties of living cells and to investigate cell regulatory responses upon environmental changes.

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