TY - JOUR
T1 - A brief exploration of the physical properties of single living cells under dynamic loading conditions
AU - Xu, Dasen
AU - Zhang, Chongyu
AU - Peng, Ruining
AU - Zhang, Ru
AU - Chen, Haoyu
AU - Li, Yulong
AU - Yang, Hui
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 Xu, Zhang, Peng, Zhang, Chen, Li and Yang.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Introduction: Single living cells exhibit both active biological functions and material-like mechanical behaviors. While extensive research has focused on static or quasi-static loading, the purely mechanical properties under high-rate impact remain underexplored. Investigating cell responses to dynamic loading can isolate rapid deformation characteristics, potentially clarifying how life activities modulate mechanical behavior. Methods: We developed a custom dynamic loading system to expose single adherent macrophage cells to transient compression–shear stresses in a controlled fluid environment. A Polymethyl Methacrylate chamber housed the cells, and impact pressures (156.48–3603.85 kPa) were measured in real time using a high-frequency sensor. High-speed imaging (up to 2×105 fps) captured cellular area changes, providing insight into global deformation. In total, 198 valid experiments were performed, and statistical tests confirmed that initial perimeter and area followed normal-like distributions suitable for theoretical analysis. Results: Cells demonstrated a two-stage expansion under shock loading. At lower pressures, cytoplasmic regions rapidly spread into the focal plane, producing significant increases in projected area. As pressure rose further, deformation rate decreased, reflecting the constraining influence of the nucleus. By analyzing the final-to-initial area ratios across various pressures and initial cell sizes, we derived an incomplete state equation akin to Tait-like or Birch–Murnaghan models, indicating an inflection point of maximum deformation rate. Discussion: These findings highlight that fast impact loading effectively minimizes confounding biological processes, revealing intrinsic mechanical responses. The proposed state equation captures cell behavior within milliseconds, offering a path to integrate dynamic results with slower, life-activity-driven adaptations, and laying groundwork for more comprehensive biomechanical models of living cells.
AB - Introduction: Single living cells exhibit both active biological functions and material-like mechanical behaviors. While extensive research has focused on static or quasi-static loading, the purely mechanical properties under high-rate impact remain underexplored. Investigating cell responses to dynamic loading can isolate rapid deformation characteristics, potentially clarifying how life activities modulate mechanical behavior. Methods: We developed a custom dynamic loading system to expose single adherent macrophage cells to transient compression–shear stresses in a controlled fluid environment. A Polymethyl Methacrylate chamber housed the cells, and impact pressures (156.48–3603.85 kPa) were measured in real time using a high-frequency sensor. High-speed imaging (up to 2×105 fps) captured cellular area changes, providing insight into global deformation. In total, 198 valid experiments were performed, and statistical tests confirmed that initial perimeter and area followed normal-like distributions suitable for theoretical analysis. Results: Cells demonstrated a two-stage expansion under shock loading. At lower pressures, cytoplasmic regions rapidly spread into the focal plane, producing significant increases in projected area. As pressure rose further, deformation rate decreased, reflecting the constraining influence of the nucleus. By analyzing the final-to-initial area ratios across various pressures and initial cell sizes, we derived an incomplete state equation akin to Tait-like or Birch–Murnaghan models, indicating an inflection point of maximum deformation rate. Discussion: These findings highlight that fast impact loading effectively minimizes confounding biological processes, revealing intrinsic mechanical responses. The proposed state equation captures cell behavior within milliseconds, offering a path to integrate dynamic results with slower, life-activity-driven adaptations, and laying groundwork for more comprehensive biomechanical models of living cells.
KW - cell mechanics
KW - dynamic loading
KW - experiment construction
KW - state equation of a cell
KW - weak shock wave
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105008761361&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3389/fbioe.2025.1574853
DO - 10.3389/fbioe.2025.1574853
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105008761361
SN - 2296-4185
VL - 13
JO - Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology
JF - Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology
M1 - 1574853
ER -