Litcius/Paper detail

Active viscoelastic models for cell and tissue mechanics

Bahareh Tajvidi Safa, Changjin Huang, Alexandre Kabla, Ruiguo Yang

2024Royal Society Open Science14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Living cells are out of equilibrium active materials. Cell-generated forces are transmitted across the cytoskeleton network and to the extracellular environment. These active force interactions shape cellular mechanical behaviour, trigger mechano-sensing, regulate cell adaptation to the microenvironment and can affect disease outcomes. In recent years, the mechanobiology community has witnessed the emergence of many experimental and theoretical approaches to study cells as mechanically active materials. In this review, we highlight recent advancements in incorporating active characteristics of cellular behaviour at different length scales into classic viscoelastic models by either adding an active tension-generating element or adjusting the resting length of an elastic element in the model. Summarizing the two groups of approaches, we will review the formulation and application of these models to understand cellular adaptation mechanisms in response to various types of mechanical stimuli, such as the effect of extracellular matrix properties and external loadings or deformations.

Topics & Concepts

MechanobiologyViscoelasticityExtracellular matrixBiological systemAdaptation (eye)Cell mechanicsComputer scienceActive matterCytoskeletonMechanicsBiochemical engineeringCellBiophysicsNeuroscienceNanotechnologyMaterials sciencePhysicsBiologyCell biologyEngineeringComposite materialGeneticsCellular Mechanics and Interactions3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications