Litcius/Paper detail

The role of nonlinear mechanical properties of biomimetic hydrogels for organoid growth

Benedikt Buchmann, Pablo Fernández, Andreas R. Bausch

2021Biophysics Reviews17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cell-driven plastic remodeling of the extracellular matrix (ECM) is a key regulator driving cell invasion and organoid morphogenesis in 3D. While, mostly, the linear properties are reported, the nonlinear and plastic property of the used matrix is required for these processes to occur. Here, we report on the nonlinear and plastic mechanical properties of networks derived from collagen I, Matrigel, and related hybrid gels and link their mechanical response to the underlying collagen structure. We reveal the predominantly linear behavior of Matrigel over a wide range of strains and contrast this to the highly nonlinear and plastic response of collagen upon mechanical load. We show that the mechanical nonlinear response of collagen can be gradually diminished by enriching the network stepwise with Matrigel. This tunability results from the suppression of collagen polymerization in the presence of Matrigel, resulting in a collagen network structure with significant smaller mesh size and consequent contribution to the mechanical response. Thus, the nonlinear plastic properties and structure of the ECM is not simply the addition of two independent network types but depends on the exact polymerization conditions. The understanding of this interplay is key toward an understanding of the dependencies of cellular interactions with their ECM and sheds light on the nonlinear cell-ECM interaction during organogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

MatrigelExtracellular matrixOrganoidSelf-healing hydrogelsNonlinear systemMaterials scienceBiophysicsMatrix (chemical analysis)NanotechnologyBiomedical engineeringChemistryCell biologyCellComposite materialPolymer chemistryBiologyBiochemistryPhysicsMedicineQuantum mechanicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchCollagen: Extraction and Characterization