4.7 Review

Measuring mechanical stress in living tissues

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS PHYSICS
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages 300-317

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42254-020-0184-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities MICINN/FEDER [PGC2018-099645-B-I00, DPI2015-71789-R]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017-FI-B1-00068, SGR-2017-01602, 2014-SGR-1471]
  3. CERCA Programme
  4. European Research Council [CoG-616480, CoG-681434]
  5. European Union [797621]
  6. Obra Social la Caixa
  7. Fundacio la Marato de TV3 [201903-30-31-32]
  8. Severo Ochoa Award of Excellence from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO)
  9. ICREA Academia award
  10. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [797621] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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Living tissues are active, multifunctional materials capable of generating, sensing, withstanding and responding to mechanical stress. These capabilities enable tissues to adopt complex shapes during development, to sustain those shapes during homeostasis and to restore them during healing and regeneration. Abnormal stress is associated with a broad range of pathological conditions, including developmental defects, inflammatory diseases, tumour growth and metastasis. A number of techniques are available to measure mechanical stress in living tissues at cellular and subcellular resolution. 2D techniques that map stress in cultured cell monolayers provide the highest resolution and accessibility, and include 2D traction force microscopy, micropillar arrays, monolayer stress microscopy and monolayer stretching between flexible cantilevers. Mapping stresses in tissues cultured in 3D can be achieved using 3D traction force microscopy and the microbulge test. Techniques for measuring stress in vivo include servo-null methods for measuring luminal pressure, deformable inclusions, Forster resonance energy transfer tension sensors, laser ablation and computational methods for force inference. Although these techniques are far from becoming everyday tools in biomedical laboratories, their rapid development is fostering key advances in our understanding of the role of mechanics in morphogenesis, homeostasis and disease. Methods for measuring stress in living cells, tissues and organs are advancing steadily and are increasingly being used for biomedical applications. In this Review, we discuss the concept of tissue stress and the techniques available to measure it in 2D and 3D cell and tissue cultures and in vivo.

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