Measuring the biomechanical properties of cell-derived fibronectin fibrils.

Biomech Model Mechanobiol

Department of Biomedical Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University, 401 W. Main St., Richmond, VA, 23284, USA.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • FN (fibronectin) fibrils are crucial for processes like embryonic development and wound healing, but their mechanical properties are not well understood.
  • A new system allows for the measurement of cell-derived FN fibrils, revealing three types of elasticity (linear, strain-hardening, and nonlinear) and showing that fibril behavior changes with repeated stretching.
  • The average elasticity of these fibrils is about 8 MPa, and they display time-dependent viscoelastic behavior, which could deepen our knowledge of cellular mechanics in development and fibrotic diseases.

Article Abstract

Embryonic development, wound healing, and organogenesis all require assembly of the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin (FN) into insoluble, viscoelastic fibrils. FN fibrils mediate cell migration, force generation, angiogenic sprouting, and collagen deposition. While the critical role of FN fibrils has long been appreciated, we still have an extremely poor understanding of their mechanical properties and how these mechanical properties facilitate cellular responses. Here, we demonstrate the development of a system to probe the mechanics of cell-derived FN fibrils and present quantified mechanical properties of these fibrils. We demonstrate that: fibril elasticity can be classified into three phenotypes: linearly elastic, strain-hardening, or nonlinear with a "toe" region; fibrils exhibit pre-conditioning, with nonlinear "toe" fibrils becoming more linear with repeated stretch and strain-hardened fibrils becoming less linear with repeated stretch; fibrils exhibit an average elastic modulus of roughly 8 MPa; and fibrils exhibit a time-dependent viscoelastic behavior, exhibiting a transition from a stress relaxation response to an inverse stress relaxation response. These findings have a potentially significant impact on our understanding of cellular mechanical responses in fibrotic diseases and embryonic development, where FN fibrils play a major role.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10237-024-01918-3DOI Listing

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