HIGHLIGHTED TOPIC Biomechanics and Mechanotransduction in Cells and Tissues Mechanical deformation of neutrophils into narrow channels induces pseudopod projection and changes (original) (raw)
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Journal of Applied Physiology, 2005
Neutrophils traversing the pulmonary microcirculation are subjected to mechanical stimulation during their deformation into narrow capillaries. To better understand the time-dependant changes caused by this mechanical stimulus, neutrophils were caused to flow into a microchannel, which allowed simultaneous visualization of cell morphology and passive rheological measurement by tracking the Brownian motion of endogenous granules. Above a threshold stimulus, mechanical deformation resulted in neutrophil activation with pseudopod projection. The activation time was inversely correlated to the rate of mechanical deformation experienced by the neutrophils. A reduction in shear moduli was observed within seconds after the onset of the mechanical stimulus, suggesting a sudden disruption of the neutrophil cytoskeleton when subjected to mechanical deformation. However, the magnitude of the reduction in moduli was independent of the degree of deformation. Recovery to nearly the initial values...
Biophysical Journal, 2002
The deformations of neutrophils as they pass through the pulmonary microcirculation affect their transit time, their tendency to contact and interact with the endothelial surface, and potentially their degree of activation. Here we model the cell as a viscoelastic Maxwell material bounded by constant surface tension and simulate indentation experiments to quantify the effects of (N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine (fMLP)-stimulation on its mechanical properties (elastic shear modulus and viscosity). We then simulate neutrophil transit through individual pulmonary capillary segments to determine the relative effects of capillary geometry and fMLP-stimulation on transit time. Indentation results indicate that neutrophil viscosity and shear modulus increase by factors of 3.4, for 10 Ϫ9 M fMLP, and 7.3, for 10 Ϫ6 M fMLP, over nonstimulated cell values, determined to be 30.8 Pa⅐s and 185 Pa, respectively. Capillary flow results indicate that capillary entrance radius of curvature has a significant effect on cell transit time, in addition to minimum capillary radius and neutrophil stimulation level. The relative effects of capillary geometry and fMLP on neutrophil transit time are presented as a simple dimensionless expression and their physiological significance is discussed.
Changes in the biomechanical properties of neutrophils and endothelial cells during adhesion
Blood, 2001
This study examined changes in the biomechanical properties of cultured pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (ECs) and neutrophils induced by adhesion of neutrophils to these ECs. The biomechanical properties of cells were evaluated using magnetic twisting cytometry, which measures the angular rotation of ferromagnetic beads bound to cells through antibody ligation on application of a specified magnetic torque. Adhesion of neutrophils to 24-hour tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α)–treated ECs, but not to untreated ECs, induced an increase in EC stiffness within 2 minutes, which was accompanied by an increase and a reorganization of F-actin in ECs. A cell-permeant, phosphoinositide-binding peptide attenuated the EC stiffening response, suggesting that intracellular phosphoinositides are required. The stiffening response was not inhibited by ML-7, a myosin light-chain kinase inhibitor, or BAPTA, an intracellular Ca2+ chelator. Moreover, the phosphorylation pattern of the regulatory m...
Mechanical Forces Induced by the Transendothelial Migration of Human Neutrophils
Biophysical Journal, 2008
The mechanisms regulating neutrophil transmigration of vascular endothelium are not fully elucidated, but involve neutrophil firm attachment and passage through endothelial cell–cell junctions. The goal of this study was to characterize the tangential forces exerted by neutrophils during transendothelial migration at cell–cell junctions using an in vitro laminar shear flow model in which confluent activated endothelium is grown on a
Mobility and shape adaptation of neutrophil in the microchannel flow
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials, 2017
This paper presents motion of neutrophil in a confined environment. Many experimental and theoretical studies were performed to show mechanics and basic principles of the white blood cell motion. However, they were mostly performed on flat plates without boundaries. More realistic model of flow in the capillaries based on confinement, curvature and adequate dimensions is applied in our experiments. These conditions lead to cell motion with deformability and three-dimensional character of that movement. Neutrophils are important cells for human immune system. Their motion and attachment often influence several diseases and immune response. Hence, studies focus on that particular cell type. We have shown that deformability of the cell influences its velocity. Cells actively participate in the flow using the shear gradient to advance control motion. The observed neutrophil velocity was from 1 up to 100 μm/s.
Viscosity of passive human neutrophils undergoing small deformations
Biophysical Journal, 1993
At issue is the type of constitutive equation that can be used to describe all possible types of deformation of the neutrophil. Here a neutrophil undergoing small deformations is studied by aspirating it into a glass pipet with a diameter that is only slightly smaller than the diameter of the spherically shaped cell. After being held in the pipet for at least seven seconds, the cell is rapidly expelled and allowed to recover its undeformed, spherical shape. The recovery takes-15 s. An analysis of the recovery process that treats the cell as a simple Newtonian liquid drop with a constant cortical (surface) tension gives a value of 3.3 X 10-5 cm/s for the ratio of the cortical tension to cytoplasmic viscosity. This value is about twice as large as a previously published value obtained with the same model from studies of large deformations of neutrophils. This discrepancy indicates that the cytoplasmic viscosity decreases as the amount of deformation decreases. An extrapolated value for the cytoplasmic viscosity at zero deformation is-600 poise when a value for the cortical tension of 0.024 dyn/cm is assumed. Clearly the neutrophil does not behave like a simple Newtonian liquid drop in that small deformations are inherently different from large deformations. More complex models consisting either of two or more fluids or multiple shells must be developed. The complex structure inside the neutrophil is shown in scanning electron micrographs of osmotically burst cells and cells whose membrane has been dissolved away.
Vinculin plays a role in neutrophil stiffening and transit through model capillary segments
Neutrophils are rapidly mobilized from the circulation to sites of inflammation. The mechanisms of neutrophil trafficking in the lung are distinct from those in the periphery, in part because the pulmonary capillaries are the primary site of neutrophil emigration rather than postcapillary venules. Since the diameter of a neutrophil is greater than the width of most pulmonary capillary segments, they must deform to transit through this capillary network, even at homeostasis. Resistance to deformation is primarily due to cortical actin that is rapidly assembled when a neutrophil is exposed to a priming or activation stimulus, resulting in neutrophil stiffening and subsequent sequestration within the pulmonary capillary network. In the current study, we use a microfluidic assay to characterize neutrophil transit through model capillary-like channels. Using techniques from single-particle tracking, we analyzed the cumulative distribution of neutrophil transit times and resolve populatio...
Blood, 2002
Neutrophils are continuously released from the bone marrow (BM), and this release is accelerated during inflammation. This study compared the mechanical properties of mature neutrophils within the BM and the circulating blood, as well as the role of microtubule rearrangement in the release of neutrophils from the BM in rats. Neutrophils isolated from the BM were stiffer than neutrophils in the circulating blood, using magnetic twisting cytometry. BM neutrophils also contained more F-actin within the submembrane region than circulating neutrophils when examined using confocal microscopy, suggesting that mature quiescent neutrophils within the BM are stiffer than circulating neutrophils because of increased formation of F-actin beneath the plasma membrane. Complement protein 5 fragments or formylmethionyl-leucylphenylalanine (fMLP) induced a stiffening response within 2 minutes that was greater in circulating than in BM neutrophils. This stiffening required F-actin formation within th...
Local Rheology of Human Neutrophils Investigated Using Atomic Force Microscopy
International Journal of Biological Sciences, 2011
During the immune response, neutrophils display localized mechanical events by interacting with their environment through the micro-vascular transit, trans-endothelial, and trans-epithelial migration. Nano-mechanical studies of human neutrophils on localized nano-domains could provide the essential information for understanding their immune responsive functions. Using the Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM)-based micro-rheology, we have investigated rheological properties of the adherent human neutrophils on local nano-domains. We have applied the modified Hertz model to obtain the viscoelastic moduli from the relatively thick body regions of the neutrophils. In addition, by using more advanced models to account for the substrate effects, we have successfully characterized the rheological properties of the thin leading and tail regions as well. We found a regional difference in the mechanical compliances of the adherent neutrophils. The central regions of neutrophils were significantly stiffer (1,548 ± 871 Pa) than the regions closer to the leading edge (686 ± 801 Pa), while the leading edge and the tail (494 ± 537 Pa) regions were mechanically indistinguishable. The frequency-dependent elastic and viscous moduli also display a similar regional difference. Over the studied frequency range (100 to 300 Hz), the complex viscoelastic moduli display the partial rubber plateau behavior where the elastic moduli are greater than the viscous moduli for a given frequency. The non-disparaging viscous modulus indicates that the neutrophils display a viscoelastic dynamic behavior rather than a perfect elastic behavior like polymer gels. In addition, we found no regional difference in the structural damping coefficient between the leading edge and the cell body. Thus, we conclude that despite the lower loss and storage moduli, the leading edges of the human neutrophils display partially elastic properties similar to the cell body. These results suggest that the lower elastic moduli in the leading edges are more favorable for the elastic fluctuation of actin filaments, which supports the polymerization of the actin filaments leading to the active protrusion during the immune response.