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S S An,
T R Bai,
J H T Bates,
J L Black,
R H Brown,
V Brusasco,
P Chitano,
L Deng,
M Dowell,
D H Eidelman, [......],
P S P Silveira,
P G Smith,
J Solway,
N L Stephens,
P J Sterk,
A G Stewart,
D D Tang,
R S Tepper,
T Tran,
L Wang
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ABSTRACT: Excessive airway obstruction is the cause of symptoms and abnormal lung function in asthma. As airway smooth muscle (ASM) is the effecter controlling airway calibre, it is suspected that dysfunction of ASM contributes to the pathophysiology of asthma. However, the precise role of ASM in the series of events leading to asthmatic symptoms is not clear. It is not certain whether, in asthma, there is a change in the intrinsic properties of ASM, a change in the structure and mechanical properties of the noncontractile components of the airway wall, or a change in the interdependence of the airway wall with the surrounding lung parenchyma. All these potential changes could result from acute or chronic airway inflammation and associated tissue repair and remodelling. Anti-inflammatory therapy, however, does not "cure" asthma, and airway hyperresponsiveness can persist in asthmatics, even in the absence of airway inflammation. This is perhaps because the therapy does not directly address a fundamental abnormality of asthma, that of exaggerated airway narrowing due to excessive shortening of ASM. In the present study, a central role for airway smooth muscle in the pathogenesis of airway hyperresponsiveness in asthma is explored.
European Respiratory Journal 06/2007; 29(5):834-60. · 5.89 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We report here the creep function measured in three cell types, after a variety of interventions, and over three time decades (from 3 ms to 3.2 s). In each case the response conformed to a power law, implying that no distinct molecular relaxation times or time constants could characterize the response. These results add to a growing body of evidence that stands in contrast to widely used viscoelastic models featuring at most a few time constants. We show instead that the ability of the matrix to deform is time-scale invariant and characterized by only one parameter: the power law exponent that controls the transition between solid-like and liquid-like behaviour. Moreover, we validate linearity by comparison of measurements in the time and frequency domains.
Journal of The Royal Society Interface 12/2004; 1(1):91-7. · 4.40 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Mechanical stresses acting on the apical cell surface are transmitted to the anchoring sites of the cell via cytoskeletal polymers, but details of the stress-, strain- or deformation field within the cell are largely unknown. Here we have measured the deformation field within cultured smooth muscle cells in response to small stresses. Stresses were applied to integrin receptors on the cell surface via magnetic microbeads (4.5 μm diameter). The beads were torqued in a sinusoidally varying magnetic twisting field (specific torque amplitude of 90 Pa, frequency 0.3 Hz). Cells were transfected to express either fluorescent mitochondria, microfilaments, or microtubules. Ten images were taken during each of ten or more twisting cycles, from which we computed the deformation field within the cell. Our results confirm that mechanical stresses in cells can be transmitted via focal adhesions on the apical cell surface to the internal cytoskeleton. Importantly, cytoskeletal deformations in most cells decayed to below the resolution limit within a short distance (∼5μm) from the locus of stress application.
Engineering in Medicine and Biology, 2002. 24th Annual Conference and the Annual Fall Meeting of the Biomedical Engineering Society EMBS/BMES Conference, 2002. Proceedings of the Second Joint; 02/2002
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ABSTRACT: We report a scaling law that governs both the elastic and frictional properties of a wide variety of living cell types, over a wide range of time scales and under a variety of biological interventions. This scaling identifies these cells as soft glassy materials existing close to a glass transition, and implies that cytoskeletal proteins may regulate cell mechanical properties mainly by modulating the effective noise temperature of the matrix. The practical implications are that the effective noise temperature is an easily quantified measure of the ability of the cytoskeleton to deform, flow, and reorganize.
Physical Review Letters 11/2001; 87(14):148102. · 7.37 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We measured the time course and heterogeneity of responses to contractile and relaxing agonists in individual human airway smooth muscle (HASM) cells in culture. To this end, we developed a microrheometer based on magnetic twisting cytometry adapted with a novel optical detection system. Ferromagnetic beads (4.5 microm) coated with Arg-Gly-Asp peptide were bound to integrins on the cell surface. The beads were twisted in a sinusoidally varying magnetic field at 0.75 Hz. Oscillatory bead displacements were recorded using a phase-synchronized video camera. The storage modulus (cell stiffness; G'), loss modulus (friction; G"), and hysteresivity (eta; ratio of G" to G') could be determined with a time resolution of 1.3 s. Within 5 s after addition of histamine (100 microM), G' increased by 2.2-fold, G" increased by 3.0-fold, and eta increased transiently from 0.27 to 0.34. By 20 s, eta decreased to 0.25, whereas G' and G" remained above baseline. Comparable results were obtained with bradykinin (1 microM). These changes in G', G", and eta measured in cells were similar to but smaller than those reported for intact muscle strips. When we ablated baseline tone by adding the relaxing agonist dibutyryl cAMP (1 mM), G' decreased within 5 min by 3.3-fold. With relaxing and contracting agonists, G' could be manipulated through a contractile range of 7.3-fold. Cell populations exhibited a log-normal distribution of baseline stiffness (geometric SD = 2.8) and a heterogeneous response to both contractile and relaxing agonists, partly attributable to variability of baseline tone between cells. The total contractile range of the cells (from maximally relaxed to maximally stimulated), however, was independent of baseline stiffness. We conclude that HASM cells in culture exhibit a clear, although heterogeneous, response to contractile and relaxing agonists and express the essential mechanical features characteristic of the contractile response observed at the tissue level.
Journal of Applied Physiology 09/2001; 91(2):986-94. · 3.75 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A magnetic twisting stimulator was developed based on the previously published technique of magnetic twisting cytometry. Using ligand-coated ferromagnetic microbeads, this device can apply mechanical stresses with varying amplitudes, duration, frequencies, and waveforms to specific cell surface receptors. Biochemical and biological responses of the cells to the mechanical stimulation can be assayed. Twisting integrin receptors with RGD (Arg-Gly-Asp)-containing peptide-coated beads increased endothelin-1 (ET-1) gene expression by >100%. In contrast, twisting scavenger receptors with acetylated low-density lipoprotein-coated beads or twisting HLA antigen with anti-HLA antibody-coated beads did not lead to alterations in ET-1 gene expression. In situ hybridization showed that the increase in ET-1 mRNA was localized in the cells that were stressed with the RGD-coated beads. Blocking stretch-activated ion channels with gadolinium, chelating Ca2+ with EGTA, or inhibiting tyrosine phosphorylation with genistein abolished twist-induced ET-1 mRNA elevation. Abolishing cytoskeletal tension with an inhibitor of the myosin ATPase, with an inhibitor of myosin light chain kinase, or with an actin microfilament disrupter blocked twisted-induced increases in ET-1 expression. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the molecular structural linkage of integrin-cytoskeleton is an important pathway for stress-induced ET-1 gene expression.
AJP Cell Physiology 06/2001; 280(6):C1475-84. · 3.54 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We investigated the rheological properties of living human airway smooth muscle cells in culture and monitored the changes in rheological properties induced by exogenous stimuli. We oscillated small magnetic microbeads bound specifically to integrin receptors and computed the storage modulus (G') and loss modulus (G") from the applied torque and the resulting rotational motion of the beads as determined from their remanent magnetic field. Under baseline conditions, G' increased weakly with frequency, whereas G" was independent of the frequency. The cell was predominantly elastic, with the ratio of G" to G' (defined as eta) being approximately 0. 35 at all frequencies. G' and G" increased together after contractile activation and decreased together after deactivation, whereas eta remained unaltered in each case. Thus elastic and dissipative stresses were coupled during changes in contractile activation. G' and G" decreased with disruption of the actin fibers by cytochalasin D, but eta increased. These results imply that the mechanisms for frictional energy loss and elastic energy storage in the living cell are coupled and reside within the cytoskeleton.
Journal of Applied Physiology 11/2000; 89(4):1619-32. · 3.75 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We have previously reported that interleukin (IL)-1beta causes beta-adrenergic hyporesponsiveness in cultured human airway smooth muscle cells by increasing cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) expression and prostanoid formation. The purpose of this study was to determine whether extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) are involved in these events. Levels of phosphorylated ERK (p42 and p44) increased 8.3- and 13-fold, respectively, 15 min after treatment with IL-1beta (20 ng/ml) alone. Pretreating cells with the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase inhibitor PD-98059 or U-126 (2 h before IL-1beta treatment) decreased ERK phosphorylation. IL-1beta (20 ng/ml for 22 h) alone caused a marked induction of COX-2 and increased basal PGE(2) release 28-fold (P < 0.001). PD-98059 (100 microM) and U-126 (10 microM) each decreased COX-2 expression when administered before IL-1beta treatment. In control cells, PD-98059 and U-126 had no effect on basal or arachidonic acid (AA; 10 microM)-stimulated PGE(2) release, but both inhibitors caused a significant decrease in bradykinin (BK; 1 microM)-stimulated PGE(2) release, consistent with a role for ERK in the activation of phospholipase A(2) by BK. In IL-1beta-treated cells, prior administration of PD-98059 caused 81, 92 and 40% decreases in basal and BK- and AA-stimulated PGE(2) release, respectively (P < 0.01), whereas administration of PD-98059 20 h after IL-1beta resulted in only 38 and 43% decreases in basal and BK-stimulated PGE(2) release, respectively (P < 0.02) and had no effect on AA-stimulated PGE(2) release. IL-1beta attenuated isoproterenol-induced decreases in human airway smooth muscle stiffness as measured by magnetic twisting cytometry, and PD-98059 or U-126 abolished this effect in a concentration-dependent manner. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that ERKs are involved early in the signal transduction pathway through which IL-1beta induces PGE(2) synthesis and beta-adrenergic hyporesponsiveness and that ERKs act by inducing COX-2 and activating phospholipase A(2).
The American journal of physiology 11/1999; 277(5 Pt 1):L943-51.
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ABSTRACT: We have developed a method for determining the mechanical impedance of the cytoskeleton (CSK) based on magnetic twisting cytometry. Ligand coated ferromagnetic beads were bound to the integrin receptors of human airway smooth muscle cells, and oscillatory torques applied with a magnetic field. Bead rotation was determined by measuring the oscillating magnetic field produced by the beads. The time course of stiffening in response to pharmacological agonists was also measured with a resolution of 10s. Apparent elastance (E) and viscosity (R) of the CSK were calculated from the complex ratio of specific magnetic torque to bead rotation. E increased weakly with oscillation frequency while R decreased inversely with frequency. Although the magnitudes of E and R were altered during changes in muscle activation, the frequency dependence was unchanged. This frequency dependence is known as structural damping, and is a novel finding for the mechanics of the CSK
[Engineering in Medicine and Biology, 1999. 21st Annual Conf. and the 1999 Annual Fall Meeting of the Biomedical Engineering Soc.] BMES/EMBS Conference, 1999. Proceedings of the First Joint; 02/1999