It has been well established that the fundamental behaviors of mammalian cells are influenced by the physical cues that they experience from their surrounding environment. With respect to cells in our bodies, mechanically-driven morphological and phenotypic changes to our cells have been linked to responses critical to both normal development and disease progression, including lung, heart, muscle and bone disorders, and cancer. Although significant advancements to our understanding of cell behavior have been made using 2D cell culture methods, questions regarding how physical stretch guides cell behavior in more complex 3D biological systems remain unanswered. To address these questions, we used microfabrication techniques to develop vacuum-actuated stretchers for high throughput stretching and dynamic mechanical screening of 3D microtissue cultures. This thesis contains five research chapters that have utilized these devices to advance our understanding of how cells feel stretch and how it influences their behavior in a 3D matrix. In the first research chapter (chapter 2), we characterized how stretch is transferred from the tissue-level to the single-cell level and we investigated the cytoskeletal reinforcement response to long-term mechanical conditioning. In the second research chapter (chapter 3), we examined the effects of an acute dynamic stretch and found that 3D cultures soften through actin depolymerization to homeostatically maintain a mean tension. This softening response to stretch may lengthen tissues in our body, and thus may be an important mechanism by which airway resistance and arterial blood pressure are controlled. In the third and forth research chapters (chapter 4-5), we investigated the time dependencies of microtissues cultures and we found that their behavior differed from our knowledge of the rheological behavior of cells in 2D culture. Microtissues instead followed a stretched exponential model that seemed to be set by a dynamic equilibrium between cytoskeletal assembly and disassembly rates. The difference in the behavior from cells in 2D may reflect the profound changes to the structure and distribution of the cytoskeleton that occur when cells are grown on flat surfaces vs. within a 3D environment. In the fifth and final research chapter (chapter 6), we examined how mechanical forces may contribute to the progression of tissue fibrosis through activating latent TGF-β1. Our results suggest that mechanical stretch contributes to a feed forward loop that preserves a myofibroblastic phenotype. Together these investigations further our understanding of how cells respond to mechanical stimuli within 3D environments, and thus, mark a significant contribution to the fields of mechanobiology and cell mechanics.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/40555 |
Date | 27 May 2020 |
Creators | Walker, Matthew |
Contributors | Pelling, Andrew |
Publisher | Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa |
Source Sets | Université d’Ottawa |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Format | application/pdf |
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