Department of Biomedical Engineering, Columbia University, New York, NY, United States.
Front Immunol. 2021 Aug 9;12:704693. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.704693. eCollection 2021.
The ability of cells to recognize and respond to the mechanical properties of their environment is of increasing importance in T cell physiology. However, initial studies in this direction focused on planar hydrogel and elastomer surfaces, presenting several challenges in interpretation including difficulties in separating mechanical stiffness from changes in chemistry needed to modulate this property. We introduce here the use of magnetic fields to change the structural rigidity of microscale elastomer pillars loaded with superparamagnetic nanoparticles, independent of substrate chemistry. This magnetic modulation of rigidity, embodied as the pillar spring constant, changed the interaction of mouse naïve CD4 T cells from a contractile morphology to one involving deep embedding into the array. Furthermore, increasing spring constant was associated with higher IL-2 secretion, showing a functional impact on mechanosensing. The system introduced here thus separates local substrate stiffness and long-range structural rigidity, revealing new facets of T cell interaction with their environment.
细胞识别和响应其环境力学特性的能力在 T 细胞生理学中变得越来越重要。然而,最初在这个方向上的研究集中在平面水凝胶和弹性体表面,这在解释上存在一些挑战,包括难以将力学刚度与调节该特性所需的化学变化区分开来。我们在这里引入了磁场的使用,以改变加载超顺磁纳米粒子的微尺度弹性体支柱的结构刚性,而不依赖于基底化学。这种刚性的磁调制,表现为支柱弹性常数的变化,使小鼠幼稚 CD4 T 细胞的相互作用从收缩形态转变为涉及深入嵌入阵列的形态。此外,弹性常数的增加与更高的 IL-2 分泌有关,这表明对机械感觉有功能影响。因此,这里引入的系统将局部基底刚度和远程结构刚性分离,揭示了 T 细胞与其环境相互作用的新方面。