粘弹性
细胞外基质
自愈水凝胶
再生医学
多糖
弹性(物理)
组织工程
细胞生物学
刚度
聚二甲基硅氧烷
生物物理学
材料科学
纳米技术
生物医学工程
干细胞
复合材料
生物
蛋白多糖
高分子化学
医学
作者
Ovijit Chaudhuri,Justin J. Cooper‐White,Paul A. Janmey,David Mooney,Vivek B. Shenoy
出处
期刊:Nature
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2020-08-26
卷期号:584 (7822): 535-546
被引量:1478
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-020-2612-2
摘要
Substantial research over the past two decades has established that extracellular matrix (ECM) elasticity, or stiffness, affects fundamental cellular processes, including spreading, growth, proliferation, migration, differentiation and organoid formation. Linearly elastic polyacrylamide hydrogels and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomers coated with ECM proteins are widely used to assess the role of stiffness, and results from such experiments are often assumed to reproduce the effect of the mechanical environment experienced by cells in vivo. However, tissues and ECMs are not linearly elastic materials—they exhibit far more complex mechanical behaviours, including viscoelasticity (a time-dependent response to loading or deformation), as well as mechanical plasticity and nonlinear elasticity. Here we review the complex mechanical behaviours of tissues and ECMs, discuss the effect of ECM viscoelasticity on cells, and describe the potential use of viscoelastic biomaterials in regenerative medicine. Recent work has revealed that matrix viscoelasticity regulates these same fundamental cell processes, and can promote behaviours that are not observed with elastic hydrogels in both two- and three-dimensional culture microenvironments. These findings have provided insights into cell–matrix interactions and how these interactions differentially modulate mechano-sensitive molecular pathways in cells. Moreover, these results suggest design guidelines for the next generation of biomaterials, with the goal of matching tissue and ECM mechanics for in vitro tissue models and applications in regenerative medicine. This Review explores the role of viscoelasticity of tissues and extracellular matrices in cell–matrix interactions and mechanotransduction and the potential utility of viscoelastic biomaterials in regenerative medicine.
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