Probing non-Newtonian cell-matrix interactions with a confocal rheometer
ORAL
Abstract
The importance of cell mechanotransduction with the extra cellular matrix (ECM) has become increasingly clear. ECM stiffness affects cell behavior and differentiation, and simultaneously the cell affects the stiffness of the ECM. For example, tumorigenesis and metastatic invasiveness of cancer cells are associated with cell-induced changes in the ECM. Meanwhile, the ECM is a complicated environment where the cells interact with both a variety of proteins and the non-Newtonian network stiffness. In this talk we present preliminary results using a live-cell adapted confocal rheometer to probe the activity and response of human cell-line cells within a type 1 collagen network.
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Authors
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Ryan McAllister
Georgetown Univeristy
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Richard Arevalo
Georgetown University
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Daniel Koch
Georgetown University
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Jeffrey Urbach
Department of Physics, Georgetown University, Georgetown University
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Susette Mueller
Georgetown University
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Daniel Blair
Georgetown Univeristy, Department of Physics, Georgetown University, Georgetown University