Title: Isotropic: same in all directions
1Isotropic same in all directions
Neurofilaments Cross-linked In frog axon
2Linker proteins for actin
3Particle Tracking in fibroblastsLecture 5
4Tracking particles Regional stiffness
5- 3- Think of a balloon with stiff meridional
bands- networks can stretch more easily along the
axis with less stiff ropes. - 4 hoop stress versus axial stress
6Cylindrical Stresses
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8Buckling Bending
20 cm
10 cm
9Tension Field Theory
Membrane
10Coupling Mechano-/Biochemical-/Cellular-
11Inside a Blood Vessel
Endothelial cells with Nucleus bulging out
Blood flow
10 microns
12Cells- fluid or solid?
- Micropipet aspiration comparison between ECs and
chondrocytes - Comparison between EC cell nucleus
- Stiffness following spreading or adapting to
flow. - ECs in flow will minimize force on nucleus
- Enucleus 9 Ecytoplasm
13Applying global strains to Nucleus1
Round
Spread
Compression relaxation done quickly to measure
passive props while avoiding adaptation. No
hysteresis or plastic behaviour seen in spread
cells and nuclei. 1. Caille, N J. Biomech, 2002
Nucleus
14- Material properties, not inhomogeneity, explains
- The non-linear behaviour
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16Slow cell squishing
17FEM of compression
18Bone Adaptation
- Most bones experience 1000s of loads daily
- Bone cells must detect mech signals in situ and
adjust bone architecture appropriately. - Sensor cells Osteocytes Effector cells
Osteoblasts, osteoclasts - Signalling molecules PGs, NO
- Responses bone formation/resorption
19- Bending forces not only cause deformation of
osteocytes, but generate pressure gradients that
drive fluid flow through the canalicular spaces.
Bending causes compressive stress on one side of
the bone and tensile stresses on the other. This
leads to a pressure gradient in the interstitial
fluids that drives fluid flow from regions of
compression to tension. Fluid flows through the
canaliculae and across the osteocytes, providing
nutrients and causing flow-related shear stresses
on the cell membranes. The fluid flow also
creates an electric potential called a streaming
potential
20- Strain detected by mechanoreceptors or by CAMs. G
protein in membrane causes Ca and other 2nd
messengers.
21- osteocytes (Oc) and bone lining cells (BLC)
detect mechanical signals and communicate those
signals to the bone surface. Soluble mediators,
which include - prostaglandins (PGs) and nitric oxide (NO), are
released and cause the recruitment and/or
differentiation of osteoblasts (Ob) from
proliferating and nonproliferating
osteoprogenitor cells.
22- The error function, i.e., the daily loading
stimulus (S) - minus the normal loading pattern (F So), drives
bone adaptation. Abnormally low values of the
error function cause increased osteoclast
activity on bone remodeling surfaces, while
abnormally high values cause increased osteoblast
activity on bone modeling surfaces
23- Rats jumping various of numbers of times per day
showed that five jumps per day were sufficient
to increase bone mass, but increasing numbers of
jumps gave diminishing returns with respect to
bone mass. These data very closely fit the
mathematical relationship proposed in Eq. 1
24- G proteind mechanochemical signal transducer
25- Focal adhesions by Integrin and associated
proteins.
26Load type affects adaptation
- Long bones are loaded mostly in bending
- Strain _at_ neutral axis is small, and increases
away from axis - Loading that changes the neutral axis, changes
bone formation 1 - 1. Turner, CH J. Orthop. Sci, 1998.
27- MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts subjected to fluid shear
(12dynes/cm2) for 60min undergo dramatic
reorganization of the actin - cytoskeleton. A Control cells not subjected to
flow have poorly organized stress fibers labeled
with Texas red-phalloidin. - B Cells subjected to fluid flow for 60 min
develop prominent stress fibers labeled with
Texas red-phalloidin that are aligned roughly
parallel to each other. C and D Control cells not
subjected to fluid shear which have poorly
organized stress fibers
28Adaptation Cascade
- Transduction Biochemical transmission.effecto
r cell..tissue - Ion channels.Ca,NOS, COX, PGs, G protein.Obs,
Ocs..trabeculae - It is an error driven feedback system
- Driven more by infrequent abnormal strains than
by normal strains encountered during predominant
activity1 - 1. Layton, LE The success and failure of the
adaptive response to functional loading-bearing
in averting bone fracture Bone131992
29Quantifying bone adaptation
30Bone Loading Waveforms
31Resonant Stimuli for Bone
- Loading frequencies near 20 Hz
- Vibration 1
- Error Driven
- 1. Rubin, C.
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33Mechano - regulation
- Growth, proliferation, protein synthesis, gene
expression, homeostasis. - Transduction process- how?
- Single cells do not provide enough material.
- MTC can perturb 30,000 cells and is limited.
- MTS is more versatile- more cells, longer
periods, varied waveforms..
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38Markov Chains
- A dynamic model describing random movement over
time of some activity - Future state can be predicted based on current
probability and the transition matrix
39Sliding filamentds
40Dynamic equilibrium
41Sliding Filament Model
Ratchet
For A-M, vo 0.5 um/s
42Harmonic motion (undamped)
Gel motion follows simple rules Model will
predict dynamic and Static equilibrium.
Natural Frequency
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44Transition Probabilities
Todays Game Outcome
Win Lose
Win 3/4 1/2
Lose 1/4 1/2
Sum 1 1
Need a P for Todays game
Tomorrows Game Outcome
45Grades Transition Matrix
This Semester
Grade Tendencies
To predict future Start with now What are the
grade probabilities for this semester?
Next Semester
46Markov Chain
Intial Probability Set independently
47Computing Markov Chains
A is the transition probability A .75 .5
.25 .5 P is starting Probability P.1
.9 for i 120 P(,i1)AP(,i) end
48Control System, I.e. climate control
49Finding G
50Temperature Control
51Example Control System
-
3
u
52Homework
- 1. Assuming the buckling force calculated in 6,
compare the energy required to bend the
microtubule as in 5. (State assumptions). - 2. Find evidence (for or against) that the
tension field theory applies to endothelial cell
regulation. - 3. Make a model of bone adaptation. What kind of
function fits the data? - 4. Make a model of A-M sliding filaments.
- 5. Based on bending forces of microtubules,
calculate how many would be present in the EC, in
the experiments shown (make simplifying
assumptions).
53Bibliography
- 1.     Hamill OP, Martinac B. Molecular basis of
mechanotransduction in living cells. Physiol Rev
81 2001 (2)685-740. - 2.     Lang F, Busch, GL, Ritter M, Volkl H,
Waldegger S, Gulbins E, Haussinger D. Functional
significance of cell volume regulatory
mechanisms. Physiol. Rev 1998 78247-273. - 3.     Zhu C, Bao G, Wang N. Cell mechanics
Mechanical response, cell adhesion, and molecular
deformation. Annu Rev Biomed Eng 2000
2189-226. - 4.     Turner CH. Mechanical transduction
mechanisms in bone. J Bone Miner Res 2000 15
(4)105. - Tavi P, Laine M, Weckstrom M, Ruskoaho H. Cardiac
mechanotransduction from sensing to disease and
treatment. Trends in Pharmacological Sciences
2001 22 (5)254-260.
54Bibliography
- 6.     Craelius W. Stretch activation of rat
cardiac myocytes. Experimental Physiology 1993
78 (3)411-423. - 7.     Ingber DE and Folkman J. How does
extracellular matrix control capillary
morphogenesis? Cell 1989 58803-805. - 8.     Craelius, W, Huang, CJ, Palant, CE,
Guber H Mechanotransduction of swelling by rat
mesangial cells, Mechanotransduction 2000,
Engineering and Biological Materials and
Structures, ENPC, France, 13-20, 2000. - 9.     Craelius, W, Huang, CJ, Guber, H,
Palant, CE Rheological behaviour of rat
mesangial cells during swelling in vitro,
Biorheology 35397-405, 1998. - 10. Pedersen SF, Hoffmann EK, Mills JW. The
cytoskeleton and cell volume regulation. Comp
Biochem Phys A 2001 130 (3)385-399, Sp Iss SI. - 11. Lange K. Regulation of cell volume via
microvillar ion channels. J Cell Phys 2000 185
(1) 21-35.