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20 April 2012Mechanical property quantification of endothelial cells using scanning acoustic microscopy
The mechanical properties of cells reflect dynamic changes of cellular organization which occur during physiologic
activities like cell movement, cell volume regulation or cell division. Thus the study of cell mechanical properties
can yield important information for understanding these physiologic activities. Endothelial cells form the thin inner
lining of blood vessels in the cardiovascular system and are thus exposed to shear stress as well as tensile stress
caused by the pulsatile blood flow. Endothelial dysfunction might occur due to reduced resistance to mechanical
stress and is an initial step in the development of cardiovascular disease like, e.g., atherosclerosis. Therefore we
investigated the mechanical properties of primary human endothelial cells (HUVEC) of different age using scanning
acoustic microscopy at 1.2 GHz. The HUVECs are classified as young (tD < 90 h) and old (tD > 90 h) cells
depending upon the generation time for the population doubling of the culture (tD). Longitudinal sound velocity and
geometrical properties of cells (thickness) were determined using the material signature curve V(z) method for
variable culture condition along spatial coordinates. The plane wave technique with normal incidence is assumed to
solve two-dimensional wave equation. The size of the cells is modeled using multilayered (solid-fluid) system. The
propagation of transversal wave and surface acoustic wave are neglected in soft matter analysis. The biomechanical
properties of HUVEC cells are quantified in an age dependent manner.
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A. Shelke, S. Brand, T. Kundu, J. Bereiter-Hahn, C. Blase, "Mechanical property quantification of endothelial cells using scanning acoustic microscopy," Proc. SPIE 8348, Health Monitoring of Structural and Biological Systems 2012, 83481T (20 April 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.917512