Publication | Closed Access
Effective viscosity and dynamics of spreading epithelia: a solvable model
76
Citations
39
References
2017
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringFluid MechanicsCell AdhesionCytoskeletonCell BiophysicsBiomedical EngineeringActive FluidCellular PhysiologyRheological MeasurementBiomechanicsRheologyBiophysicsMechanobiologyEffective ViscosityCollective Cell MigrationDisperse FlowMechanosensingCell BiomechanicsCell BiologyRheological Constitutive EquationViscoplastic FluidDiffusion ProcessCell-matrix InteractionCell MigrationMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Collective cell migration in spreading epithelia in controlled environments has become a landmark in our current understanding of fundamental biophysical processes in development, regeneration, wound healing or cancer. Epithelial monolayers are treated as thin layers of a viscous fluid that exert active traction forces on the substrate. The model is exactly solvable and shows a broad range of applicabilities for the quantitative analysis and interpretation of force microscopy data of monolayers from a variety of experiments and cell lines. In addition, the proposed model provides physical insights into how the biological regulation of the tissue is encoded in a reduced set of time-dependent physical parameters. In particular the temporal evolution of the effective viscosity entails a mechanosensitive regulation of adhesion. Besides, the observation of an effective elastic tensile modulus can be interpreted as an emergent phenomenon in an active fluid.
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