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Cellular fate of deformable needle-shaped PLGA-PEG fibers
Zhang,Bokai1,3; Zhu,Mingliu2,7; Li,Zhi3,6; Lung,Ping Sai1; Chrzanowski,Wojciech4; Kwok,Chi Tat5; Lu,Jian2,8; Li,Quan1
2020-08-01
Source PublicationActa Biomaterialia
ISSN1742-7061
Volume112Pages:182-189
Abstract

Deformability of micro/nanometer sized particles plays an important role in particle-cell interactions and thus becomes a key parameter in carrier design in biomedicine application such as drug delivery and vaccinology. Yet the influence of material's deformability on the cellular fate of the particles as well as physiology response of live cells are to be understood. Here we show the cellular fate of needle shaped (high aspect ratio ~25) PLGA-PEG copolymer fibers depending on their deformability. We found that all the fibers entered murine macrophage cells (RAW 264.7) via phagocytosis. While the fibers of high apparent Young's modulus (average value = 872 kPa) maintained their original shape upon phagocytosis, their counterparts of low apparent Young's modulus (average value = 56 kPa) curled in cells. The observed deformation of fibers of low apparent Young's modulus in cells coincided with abnormal intracellular actin translocation and absence of lysosome/phagosome fusion in macrophages, suggesting the important role of material mechanical properties and mechano-related cellular pathway in affecting cell physiology. Statement of Significance: Particles are increasingly important in the field of biomedicine, especially when they are serving as drug carriers. Physical cues, such as mechanical properties, were shown to provide insight into their stability and influence on physiology inside the cell. In the current study, we managed to fabricate 5 types of needle shaped PLGA-PEG fibers with controlled Young's modulus. We found that hard fibers maintained their original shape upon phagocytosis, while soft fibers were curled by actin compressive force inside the cell, causing abnormal actin translocation and impediment of lysosome/phagosome fusion, suggesting the important role of material mechanical properties and mechano-related cellular pathway in affecting cell physiology.

KeywordActin Revolution Apparent Young's Modulus Deformability
DOI10.1016/j.actbio.2020.05.029
URLView the original
Indexed BySCIE
Language英語English
WOS Research AreaEngineering ; Materials Science
WOS SubjectEngineering, Biomedical ; Materials Science, bioMaterials
WOS IDWOS:000549500900015
Scopus ID2-s2.0-85086097672
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Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionDEPARTMENT OF ELECTROMECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Corresponding AuthorLu,Jian
Affiliation1.Department of Physics,The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
2.Department of Mechanical Engineering,City University of Hong Kong,Kowloon,China
3.Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Nanobiomechanics,Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology,Chinese Academy of Sciences,China
4.Faculty of Pharmacy,The University of Sydney,
5.Department of Electromechanical Engineering,University of Macau,
6.State Key Laboratory of Mechanics and Control of Mechanical Structures,Nanjing University of Aeronautics & Astronautics,Nanjing,210016,China
7.State Key Laboratory of nonlinear mechanics,Institute of Mechanics,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Beijing,No.15, West Road, North 4 Ring,100190,China
8.Centre for Advanced Structural Materials,City University of Hong Kong Shenzhen Research Institute,>Greater Bay Joint Division,Shenyang National Laboratory for Materials Science,518057,China
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Zhang,Bokai,Zhu,Mingliu,Li,Zhi,et al. Cellular fate of deformable needle-shaped PLGA-PEG fibers[J]. Acta Biomaterialia, 2020, 112, 182-189.
APA Zhang,Bokai., Zhu,Mingliu., Li,Zhi., Lung,Ping Sai., Chrzanowski,Wojciech., Kwok,Chi Tat., Lu,Jian., & Li,Quan (2020). Cellular fate of deformable needle-shaped PLGA-PEG fibers. Acta Biomaterialia, 112, 182-189.
MLA Zhang,Bokai,et al."Cellular fate of deformable needle-shaped PLGA-PEG fibers".Acta Biomaterialia 112(2020):182-189.
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