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Broadly Applicable Hydrogel Fabrication Procedures Guided by YAP/TAZ‐Activity Reveal Stiffness, Adhesiveness, and Nuclear Projected Area as Checkpoints for Mechanosensing

Alessandro Gandin, Veronica Torresan, Lorenzo Ulliana, Tito Panciera, Paolo Contessotto, Anna Citron, Francesca Zanconato, Michelangelo Cordenonsi, Stefano Piccolo, Giovanna Brusatin

2021Advanced Healthcare Materials17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Mechanical signals are pivotal ingredients in how cells perceive and respond to their microenvironments, and to synthetic biomaterials that mimic them. In spite of increasing interest in mechanobiology, probing the effects of physical cues on cell behavior remains challenging for a cell biology laboratory without experience in fabrication of biocompatible materials. Hydrogels are ideal biomaterials recapitulating the physical cues that natural extracellular matrices (ECM) deliver to cells. Here, protocols are streamlined for the synthesis and functionalization of cell adhesive polyacrylamide‐based (PAA‐OH) and fully‐defined polyethyleneglycol‐based (PEG‐RGD) hydrogels tuned at various rigidities for mechanobiology experiments, from 0.3 to >10 kPa. The mechanosignaling properties of these hydrogels are investigated in distinct cell types by monitoring the activation state of YAP/TAZ. By independently modulating substrate stiffness and adhesiveness, it is found that although ECM stiffness represents an overarching mechanical signal, the density of adhesive sites does impact on cellular mechanosignaling at least at intermediate rigidity values, corresponding to normal and pathological states of living tissues. Using these tools, it is found that YAP/TAZ nuclear accumulation occurs when the projected area of the nucleus surpasses a critical threshold of approximatively 150 µm 2 . This work suggests the existence of distinct checkpoints for cellular mechanosensing.

Topics & Concepts

Self-healing hydrogelsMechanobiologyMechanotransductionNanotechnologyMaterials scienceBiophysicsStiffnessTissue engineeringBiocompatible materialBiomedical engineeringCell biologyBiologyComposite materialMedicinePolymer chemistryCellular Mechanics and InteractionsHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZ3D Printing in Biomedical Research
Broadly Applicable Hydrogel Fabrication Procedures Guided by YAP/TAZ‐Activity Reveal Stiffness, Adhesiveness, and Nuclear Projected Area as Checkpoints for Mechanosensing | Litcius