Issue 39, 2013

Slow and anomalous dynamics of an MCF-10A epithelial cell monolayer

Abstract

Understanding the mechanics and dynamics of active matter at high density is indispensable to a range of physical and biological processes such as swarm dynamics, tissue formation and cancer metastasis. Here, we study the dynamics and mechanics of an MCF-10A epithelial cell monolayer on the multi-cellular and single-cell scales and over a wide density range. We show that the dynamics and Young's modulus of the monolayer are spatially heterogeneous on the multi-cellular scale. With increasing cell density, the monolayer approached kinetic arrest and the Young's modulus scaled critically. On the single-cell scale, as the cell density increased, cells were intermittently trapped in cages formed by their neighbors and their motion evolved from a ballistic motion to a sub-diffusive motion. Furthermore, the relaxation time and inverse self-diffusivity increased exponentially with the cell density. These findings provide a mechanism for long-ranged mechanical stress propagation, tissue remodeling and patterning at very high cell densities.

Graphical abstract: Slow and anomalous dynamics of an MCF-10A epithelial cell monolayer

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Mar 2013
Accepted
30 May 2013
First published
22 Aug 2013

Soft Matter, 2013,9, 9335-9341

Slow and anomalous dynamics of an MCF-10A epithelial cell monolayer

K. D. Nnetu, M. Knorr, S. Pawlizak, T. Fuhs and J. A. Käs, Soft Matter, 2013, 9, 9335 DOI: 10.1039/C3SM50806D

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