Cells can generate forces, but just as importantly, they can sense and respond to forces and physical cues deriving from the extracellular matrix, while living in a constantly changing biophysical environment. The ability of the cells to sense forces (mechanosensing) and translate them into coordinated gene expression pathways (mechanotransduction) is emerging as an integral component of the basic structural organization of multicellular organisms with consequences for cell differentiation, tissue renewal and homeostasis. Moreover, mechanotransduction plays a central role in the pathogenesis of some diseases and can be exploited for their treatment. Although the concept that cells can sense and respond to physical cues is well known, only lately the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms by which the cell perceives and transforms physical stimuli has become the subject of intense investigation.
This Research Topic aims to provide a current overview of the complex interplay between biophysical environment and cell mechanobiology in physiology and pathology, highlighting novel insights across all scales from the protein through the cell to the tissue and organ.
The general aim of the Research Topic is to promote awareness of multidisciplinary approaches focused to investigate cellular mechanosensing and mechanotransduction bridging the gap among biology, biomechanics, bioengineering, material sciences, pharmacy and medicine.
Researchers are invited to contribute with their original evidence-based articles and critical literature review manuscripts, summarizing the most recent and innovative developments in the growing research field of cellular mechanosensing and mechanotransduction, afforded by advances in biological analysis, imaging, in vitro model systems, experimental mechanics, computational modeling, etc.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
· Mechanosensing and mechanotransduction mechanisms in wound healing and tissue repair
· Mechanosensing and mechanotransduction mechanisms in tissue development and homeostasis, in the evolution of disease (e.g., fibrosis, cancer), in control of cell function and differentiation
· Mechanotransduction in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
· Biomaterials and biofabrication techniques for mimicking the biophysical cues
· Bioreactors and microfluidic platforms mimicking the biophysical environment
· In vitro models for investigating biophysical forces and their impact on healthy and pathological cells/tissues
· Mechanical characterization of cells, tissues, and substrates (microfabricated substrates, traction force microscopy, nanoindentation, AFM, stretching machines, etc.)
· Multiscale computational modeling
· Mechanotransduction mechanisms inhibited/promoted by molecules and drugs
Cells can generate forces, but just as importantly, they can sense and respond to forces and physical cues deriving from the extracellular matrix, while living in a constantly changing biophysical environment. The ability of the cells to sense forces (mechanosensing) and translate them into coordinated gene expression pathways (mechanotransduction) is emerging as an integral component of the basic structural organization of multicellular organisms with consequences for cell differentiation, tissue renewal and homeostasis. Moreover, mechanotransduction plays a central role in the pathogenesis of some diseases and can be exploited for their treatment. Although the concept that cells can sense and respond to physical cues is well known, only lately the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms by which the cell perceives and transforms physical stimuli has become the subject of intense investigation.
This Research Topic aims to provide a current overview of the complex interplay between biophysical environment and cell mechanobiology in physiology and pathology, highlighting novel insights across all scales from the protein through the cell to the tissue and organ.
The general aim of the Research Topic is to promote awareness of multidisciplinary approaches focused to investigate cellular mechanosensing and mechanotransduction bridging the gap among biology, biomechanics, bioengineering, material sciences, pharmacy and medicine.
Researchers are invited to contribute with their original evidence-based articles and critical literature review manuscripts, summarizing the most recent and innovative developments in the growing research field of cellular mechanosensing and mechanotransduction, afforded by advances in biological analysis, imaging, in vitro model systems, experimental mechanics, computational modeling, etc.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
· Mechanosensing and mechanotransduction mechanisms in wound healing and tissue repair
· Mechanosensing and mechanotransduction mechanisms in tissue development and homeostasis, in the evolution of disease (e.g., fibrosis, cancer), in control of cell function and differentiation
· Mechanotransduction in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
· Biomaterials and biofabrication techniques for mimicking the biophysical cues
· Bioreactors and microfluidic platforms mimicking the biophysical environment
· In vitro models for investigating biophysical forces and their impact on healthy and pathological cells/tissues
· Mechanical characterization of cells, tissues, and substrates (microfabricated substrates, traction force microscopy, nanoindentation, AFM, stretching machines, etc.)
· Multiscale computational modeling
· Mechanotransduction mechanisms inhibited/promoted by molecules and drugs