The role of the nucleus for cell mechanics: an elastic phase field approach
The nucleus of eukaryotic cells typically makes up around 30% of the cell volume and has significantly different mechanics, which can make it effectively up to ten times stiffer than the surrounding cytoplasm. Therefore it is an important element for cell mechanics, but a quantitative understanding...
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Zusammenfassung: | The nucleus of eukaryotic cells typically makes up around 30% of the cell
volume and has significantly different mechanics, which can make it effectively
up to ten times stiffer than the surrounding cytoplasm. Therefore it is an
important element for cell mechanics, but a quantitative understanding of its
mechanical role during whole cell dynamics is largely missing. Here we
demonstrate that elastic phase fields can be used to describe dynamical cell
processes in adhesive or confining environments in which the nucleus acts as a
stiff inclusion. We first introduce and verify our computational method and
then study several applications of large relevance. For cells on adhesive
patterns, we find that nuclear stress is shielded by the adhesive pattern. For
cell compression between two parallel plates, we obtain force-compression
curves that allow us to extract an effective modulus for the cell-nucleus
composite. For micropipette aspiration, the effect of the nucleus on the
effective modulus is found to be much weaker, highlighting the complicated
interplay between extracellular geometry and cell mechanics that is captured by
our approach. We also show that our phase field approach can be used to
investigate the effects of viscoelasticity and cortical tension. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2309.12777 |