37 resultados para Adhesion Molecule

em Cambridge University Engineering Department Publications Database


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Cell-implant adhesive strength is important for prostheses. In this paper, an investigation is described into the adhesion of bovine chondrocytes to Ti6Al4V-based substrates with different surface roughnesses and compositions. Cells were cultured for 2 or 5 days, to promote adhesion. The ease of cell removal was characterised, using both biochemical (trypsin) and mechanical (accelerated buoyancy and liquid flow) methods. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling has been used to estimate the shear forces applied to the cells by the liquid flow. A comparison is presented between the ease of cell detachment indicated using these methods, for the three surfaces investigated. © 2008 Materials Research Society.

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Using fluorescence microscopy with single molecule sensitivity it is now possible to follow the movement of individual fluorophore tagged molecules such as proteins and lipids in the cell membrane with nanometer precision. These experiments are important as they allow many key biological processes on the cell membrane and in the cell, such as transcription, translation and DNA replication, to be studied at new levels of detail. Computerized microscopes generate sequences of images (in the order of tens to hundreds) of the molecules diffusing and one of the challenges is to track these molecules to obtain reliable statistics such as speed distributions, diffusion patterns, intracellular positioning, etc. The data set is challenging because the molecules are tagged with a single or small number of fluorophores, which makes it difficult to distinguish them from the background, the fluorophore bleaches irreversibly over time, the number of tagged molecules are unknown and there is occasional loss of signal from the tagged molecules. All these factors make accurate tracking over long trajectories difficult. Also the experiments are technically difficulty to conduct and thus there is a pressing need to develop better algorithms to extract the maximum information from the data. For this purpose we propose a Bayesian approach and apply our technique to synthetic and a real experimental data set.

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The remodelling of the cytoskeleton and focal adhesion (FA) distributions for cells on substrates with micro-patterned ligand patches is investigated using a bio-chemo-mechanical model. We investigate the effect of ligand pattern shape on the cytoskeletal arrangements and FA distributions for cells having approximately the same area. The cytoskeleton model accounts for the dynamic rearrangement of the actin/myosin stress fibres. It entails the highly nonlinear interactions between signalling, the kinetics of tension-dependent stress-fibre formation/dissolution and stress-dependent contractility. This model is coupled with another model that governs FA formation and accounts for the mechano-sensitivity of the adhesions from thermodynamic considerations. This coupled modelling scheme is shown to capture a variety of key experimental observations including: (i) the formation of high concentrations of stress fibres and FAs at the periphery of circular and triangular, convex-shaped ligand patterns; (ii) the development of high FA concentrations along the edges of the V-, T-, Y- and U-shaped concave ligand patterns; and (iii) the formation of highly aligned stress fibres along the non-adhered edges of cells on the concave ligand patterns. When appropriately calibrated, the model also accurately predicts the radii of curvature of the non-adhered edges of cells on the concave-shaped ligand patterns.

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Experimental data have demonstrated that mushroom-shaped fibrils adhere much better to smooth substrates than punch-shaped fibrils. We present a model that suggests that detachment processes for such fibrils are controlled by defects in the contact area that are confined to its outer edge. Stress analysis of the adhered fibril, carried out for both punch and mushroom shapes with and without friction, suggests that defects near the edge of the adhesion area are much more damaging to the pull-off strength in the case of the punch than for the mushroom. The simulations show that the punch has a higher driving force for extension of small edge defects compared with the mushroom adhesion. The ratio of the pull-off force for the mushroom to that of the punch can be predicted from these simulations to be much greater than 20 in the friction-free case, similar to the experimental value. In the case of sticking friction, a ratio of 14 can be deduced. Our analysis also offers a possible explanation for the evolution of asymmetric mushroom shapes (spatulae) in the adhesion organ of geckos.