4.8 Article

A hierarchical cellular structural model to unravel the universal power-law rheological behavior of living cells

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26283-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [12072252]
  2. Natural Science Basic Research Plan in Shaanxi Province of China [2019JC-02]

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The mechanical responses of cells are primarily dependent on their generic architectural mechanism, rather than specific molecular properties. The power-law exponent of cell rheology can be quantitatively tuned by varying the stiffness or architecture of the cytoskeleton. The proposed self-similar hierarchical cellular model can naturally reproduce the universal power-law characteristics of cell rheology.
Living cells are a complex soft material with fascinating mechanical properties. A striking feature is that, regardless of their types or states, cells exhibit a universal power-law rheological behavior which to this date still has not been captured by a single theoretical model. Here, we propose a cellular structural model that accounts for the essential mechanical responses of cell membrane, cytoplasm and cytoskeleton. We demonstrate that this model can naturally reproduce the universal power-law characteristics of cell rheology, as well as how its power-law exponent is related to cellular stiffness. More importantly, the power-law exponent can be quantitatively tuned in the range of 0.1 similar to 0.5, as found in most types of cells, by varying the stiffness or architecture of the cytoskeleton. Based on the structural characteristics, we further develop a self-similar hierarchical model that can spontaneously capture the power-law characteristics of creep compliance over time and complex modulus over frequency. The present model suggests that mechanical responses of cells may depend primarily on their generic architectural mechanism, rather than specific molecular properties. Different types of cells exhibit a universal power-law rheological behavior which to this date has not been captured by a single theoretical model. Here, the authors propose a self-similar hierarchical cellular model that can naturally reproduce the universal power-law characteristics of cell rheology.

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