Login / Signup

Endothelial cells on an aged subendothelial matrix display heterogeneous strain profiles in silico.

J C KohnTamer AbdalrahmanK L SackCynthia A Reinhart-KingThomas Franz
Published in: Biomechanics and modeling in mechanobiology (2018)
Within the artery intima, endothelial cells respond to mechanical cues and changes in subendothelial matrix stiffness. Recently, we found that the aging subendothelial matrix stiffens heterogeneously and that stiffness heterogeneities are present on the scale of one cell length. However, the impacts of these complex mechanical micro-heterogeneities on endothelial cells have not been fully understood. Here, we simulate the effects of matrices that mimic young and aged vessels on single- and multi-cell endothelial cell models and examine the resulting cell basal strain profiles. Although there are limitations to the model which prohibit the prediction of intracellular strain distributions in alive cells, this model does introduce mechanical complexities to the subendothelial matrix material. More heterogeneous basal strain distributions are present in the single- and multi-cell models on the matrix mimicking an aged artery over those exhibited on the young artery. Overall, our data indicate that increased heterogeneous strain profiles in endothelial cells are displayed in silico when there is an increased presence of microscale arterial mechanical heterogeneities in the matrix.
Keyphrases
  • endothelial cells
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • high glucose
  • stem cells
  • big data
  • cardiovascular disease
  • type diabetes
  • machine learning
  • metabolic syndrome
  • cell death
  • bone marrow
  • deep learning