Extracellular electrophysiological recordings were made from cardiac cells cultured for up to seven days over microfabricated arrays of field-effect transistors. The recorded signals can be separated mainly into two types of cell transistor couplings: one that can be explained entirely by purely passive circuitry elements, and a second where voltage-gated ion channels contribute greatly to the measured extracellular signal.
This study examined the behavior of rat tendon fibroblasts, baby hamster kidney fibroblasts, macrophage-like P388D1 cells, and neurons from rat dorsal root ganglia, cultured on fibronectin strands 0.2-5 micrograms in diameter. We investigated cell spreading, orientation, formation of focal contacts, the speed of cell movement, and the speed of neurite outgrowth in cells cultured on fibronectin strands, glass covered with fibronectin, and plain, nontreated glass. Fibronectin strands significantly promoted cell spreading and caused a marked alignment of all kinds of cells to the direction of the fiber. The fibers caused the alignment of actin filaments in fibroblasts and focal contacts in fibroblasts and macrophages and increased polymerization of F-actin in cells. Fibronectin fibers also increased the speed and persistence of cell movement and the rate of neurite outgrowth. Macrophages grown on fibronectin fibers produced numerous actin-rich microspikes and adopted a polarized, migratory phenotype. These findings indicate that fibronectin strands, resembling natural components of the extracellular matrix, are more effective in activating various types of cells then two-dimensional, fibronectin-covered substrata. The results also confirm the suitability of the three-dimensionally oriented fibronectin form for use in clinical practice.
Morphogenesis is underpinned by orientated cell division, motility and growth. The substratum for migrating cells in vivo comprises either extracellular matrix or the surfaces of adjacent cells and both are believed to inform the dynamic behaviour of adherent cells through contact guidance. Collisions between migrating cells in vitro can induce the phenomena of contact inhibition of locomotion and division, suggesting that their sensitivity to substratumderived cues may also be influenced by population density. In the present study dermal fibroblasts, which are known to be motile in culture and are fundamental to the organization of the extracellular matrix, were used to examine the influence of population pressure on the ability of substratum topography to induce contact guidance.The findings suggest that sensitivity to substratum-derived morphogenetic guidance cues, as revealed by alignment of cells to microtopography, is modulated by population pressure.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.