Derick Yongabi, Olivier Deschaume, Carmen Bartic, Michael Wübbenhorst, Patrick Wagner
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Dynamically controlling cell-material interactions has a strong potential for advancing many cell-based technologies, including cell detection and cell sorting systems. To this end, fundamental studies that provide insights into how cells respond biologically to physico-chemical cues are necessary. Studies show that biological responses, such as cytoskeletal reorganization alter the overall viscoelastic properties of cells. Here, we monitored, in real time, and non-invasively, the evolution of the viscoelastic properties of yeast cells as a function of medium ionic strength (IS). Measurements were performed on SiO2-coated sensor surfaces using the quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D). Our results indicate that, for every adhesion phase, the cell stiffness decreases with increasing IS. This trend was consistent across the various cell concentrations studied. In terms of cell-substrate interactions, we show that a high IS promotes cell adhesion for all cell concentrations, including ultra-low concentrations. Our results also show that while the adhesion signal decreases with cell concentration for each IS, only temporal and close to noise-level adhesion signals were measured in ion-free medium irrespective of the cell concentration. We also show that cell adhesion rates are higher in physiological ionic strengths compared to cells in higher ionic strengths. Finally, from a cell detection perspective, the results reveal that for very low cell concentrations, large signal enhancements can be achieved by measuring the same concentration in a higher ionic strength. This result also applies for measurements on gold surfaces; thus, we suggest ionic tuning as a strategy for promoting trace-level cell detection in biosensors and cell sorting applications.
期刊介绍:
The scope of Physics in Medicine consists of the application of theoretical and practical physics to medicine, physiology and biology. Topics covered are: Physics of Imaging Ultrasonic imaging, Optical imaging, X-ray imaging, Fluorescence Physics of Electromagnetics Neural Engineering, Signal analysis in Medicine, Electromagnetics and the nerve system, Quantum Electronics Physics of Therapy Ultrasonic therapy, Vibrational medicine, Laser Physics Physics of Materials and Mechanics Physics of impact and injuries, Physics of proteins, Metamaterials, Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, Biomedical Materials, Physics of vascular and cerebrovascular diseases, Micromechanics and Micro engineering, Microfluidics in medicine, Mechanics of the human body, Rotary molecular motors, Biological physics, Physics of bio fabrication and regenerative medicine Physics of Instrumentation Engineering of instruments, Physical effects of the application of instruments, Measurement Science and Technology, Physics of micro-labs and bioanalytical sensor devices, Optical instrumentation, Ultrasound instruments Physics of Hearing and Seeing Acoustics and hearing, Physics of hearing aids, Optics and vision, Physics of vision aids Physics of Space Medicine Space physiology, Space medicine related Physics.