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Photocontrolled DNA nanotubes as stiffness tunable matrices for controlling cellular behavior.

Soumya SethiTomoko EmuraKumi HidakaHiroshi SugiyamaMasayuki Endo
Published in: Nanoscale (2023)
Cell behavior is determined by a variety of properties of the extracellular environment like ligand spacing, nanotopography, and matrix stiffness. Matrix stiffness changes occur during many biological processes like wound healing, tumorigenesis, and development. These spatio-temporal dynamic changes in stiffness can cause significant changes in cell morphology, cell signaling, migration, cytoskeleton etc . In this paper, we have created photocontrolled stiffness-tunable DNA nanotubes which can undergo reversible changes in their conformation upon UV and VIS irradiation. When used as a substrate for cell culture, the photocontrolled DNA nanotubes can tune the cell morphology of HeLa cells from a long spindle-shaped morphology with long filopodia protrusions to a round morphology with short filopodia-like extrusions. Such a photocontrolled nanosystem can give us deep insights into the cell-matrix interactions in the native extracellular matrix caused by nanoscopic changes in stiffness.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • extracellular matrix
  • circulating tumor
  • single molecule
  • cell free
  • cell proliferation
  • radiation induced
  • amino acid
  • light emitting