Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanobiology of 3D cell confinement and extracellular crowding

Gabriela Da Silva André, Céline Labouesse

2024Biophysical Reviews22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cells and tissues are often under some level of confinement, imposed by the microenvironment and neighboring cells, meaning that there are limitations to cell size, volume changes, and fluid exchanges. 3D cell culture, increasingly used for both single cells and organoids, inherently impose levels of confinement absent in 2D systems. It is thus key to understand how different levels of confinement influences cell survival, cell function, and cell fate. It is well known that the mechanical properties of the microenvironment, such as stiffness and stress relaxation, are important in activating mechanosensitive pathways, and these are responsive to confinement conditions. In this review, we look at how low, intermediate, and high levels of confinement modulate the activation of known mechanobiology pathways, in single cells, organoids, and tumor spheroids, with a specific focus on 3D confinement in microwells, elastic, or viscoelastic scaffolds. In addition, a confining microenvironment can drastically limit cellular communication in both healthy and diseased tissues, due to extracellular crowding. We discuss potential implications of extracellular crowding on molecular transport, extracellular matrix deposition, and fluid transport. Understanding how cells sense and respond to various levels of confinement should inform the design of 3D engineered matrices that recapitulate the physical properties of tissues.

Topics & Concepts

MechanobiologyMembrane biologyExtracellularBiophysicsChemistryCell biologyNanotechnologyBiologyMaterials scienceBiochemistryMembraneCellular Mechanics and Interactions3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchCancer Cells and Metastasis
Mechanobiology of 3D cell confinement and extracellular crowding | Litcius