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Article Dans Une Revue Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology Année : 2015

A computational mechanics approach to assess the link between cell morphology and forces during confined migration

Résumé

Confined migration plays a fundamental role during several biological phenomena such as embryogenesis, immunity and tumorogenesis. Here, we propose a two-dimensional mechanical model to simulate the migration of a HeLa cell through a micro-channel. As in our previous works, the cell is modelled as a continuum and a standard Maxwell model is used to describe the mechanical behaviour of both the cytoplasm (including active strains) and the nucleus. The cell cyclically protrudes and contracts and develops viscous forces to adhere to the substrate. The micro-channel is represented by two rigid walls, and it exerts an additional viscous force on the cell boundaries. We test four channels whose dimensions in terms of width are i) larger than the cell diameter, ii) sub-cellular, ii) sub-nuclear and iv) much smaller than the nucleus diameter. The main objective of the work is to assess the necessary conditions for the cell to enter into the channel and migrate through it. Therefore, we evaluate both the evolution of the cell morphology and the cell-channel and cell-substrate surface forces, and we show that there exists a link between the two, which is the essential parameter determining whether the cell is permeative, invasive or penetrating.
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Dates et versions

hal-01083871 , version 1 (18-11-2014)

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Denis Aubry, Hawa Thiam, Matthieu Piel, Rachele Allena. A computational mechanics approach to assess the link between cell morphology and forces during confined migration. Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology, 2015, 14 (1), pp.143-157. ⟨10.1007/s10237-014-0595-3⟩. ⟨hal-01083871⟩
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