4.6 Article

Fiber alignment in 3D collagen networks as a biophysical marker for cell contractility

Journal

MATRIX BIOLOGY
Volume 124, Issue -, Pages 39-48

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2023.11.004

Keywords

Mechanobiology; Traction Force Microscopy; Biopolymer Networks; Fiber Orientation

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This study tests the feasibility of estimating cellular traction forces indirectly by measuring matrix remodeling. Changes in fiber orientation and density can be used as an proxy for changes in cellular forces. The method can be used for drug screening and is available as an open-source software package.
Cells cultured in 3D fibrous biopolymer matrices exert traction forces on their environment that induce deformations and remodeling of the fiber network. By measuring these deformations, the traction forces can be reconstructed if the mechanical properties of the matrix and the force-free matrix configuration are known. These requirements limit the applicability of traction force reconstruction in practice. In this study, we test whether force-induced matrix remodeling can instead be used as a proxy for cellular traction forces. We measure the traction forces of hepatic stellate cells and different glioblastoma cell lines and quantify matrix remodeling by measuring the fiber orientation and fiber density around these cells. In agreement with simulated fiber networks, we demonstrate that changes in local fiber orientation and density are directly related to cell forces. By resolving Rho-kinase (ROCK) inhibitor-induced changes of traction forces, fiber alignment, and fiber density in hepatic stellate cells, we show that the method is suitable for drug screening assays. We conclude that differences in local fiber orientation and density, which are easily measurable, can be used as a qualitative proxy for changes in traction forces. The method is available as an open-source Python package with a graphical user interface.

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