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Mechanotransduction, nanotechnology, and nanomedicine

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages 284-293

Publisher

NANJING MEDICAL UNIV
DOI: 10.7555/JBR.34.20200063

Keywords

nanomedicine; mechanotransduction; mechanical force; differentiation; tissue engineering

Funding

  1. National NaturalScience Foundation of China [31771551]

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Mechanotransduction, the conversion of mechanical forces into biochemical signals, is crucial for human development and physiology, but dysregulation can lead to various diseases. Nanosciences and applied nanotechnology are powerful tools for studying the molecular mechanisms and pathways of mechanotransduction.
Mechanotransduction, a conversion of mechanical forces into biochemical signals, is essential for human development and physiology. It is observable at all levels ranging from the whole body, organs, tissues, organelles down to molecules. Dysregulation results in various diseases such as muscular dystrophies, hypertension-induced vascular and cardiac hypertrophy, altered bone repair and cell deaths. Since mechanotransduction occurs at nanoscale, nanosciences and applied nanotechnology are powerful for studying molecular mechanisms and pathways of mechanotransduction. Atomic force microscopy, magnetic and optical tweezers are commonly used for force measurement and manipulation at the single molecular level. Force is also used to control cells, topographically and mechanically by specific types of nano materials for tissue engineering. Mechanotransduction research will become increasingly important as a sub-discipline under nanomedicine. Here we review nanotechnology approaches using force measurements and manipulations at the molecular and cellular levels during mechanotransduction, which has been increasingly play important role in the advancement of nanomedicine.

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