reviewScienceNov 18, 2005Closed access

Tissue Cells Feel and Respond to the Stiffness of Their Substrate

University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School · University of Pennsylvania · +1 more institution

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Normal tissue cells are generally not viable when suspended in a fluid and are therefore said to be anchorage dependent. Such cells must adhere to a solid, but a solid can be as rigid as glass or softer than a baby's skin. The behavior of some cells on soft materials is characteristic of important phenotypes; for example, cell growth on soft agar gels is used to identify cancer cells. However, an understanding of how tissue cells-including fibroblasts, myocytes, neurons, and other cell types-sense matrix stiffness is just emerging with quantitative studies of cells adhering to gels (or to other cells) with which elasticity can be tuned to approximate that of tissues. Key roles in molecular pathways are played…

No related works found for this paper.