Biological cells embedded in fibrous matrices have been observed to form intercellular bands of dense and aligned fibers through which they mechanically interact over long distances. Such matrix-mediated cellular interactions have been shown to regulate various biological processes. This study aimed to explore the effects of elastic nonlinearity of the fibers contained in the extracellular matrix (ECM) on the transmission of mechanical loads between contracting cells. Based on our biological experiments, we developed a finite-element model of two contracting cells embedded within a fibrous network. The individual fibers were modeled as showing linear elasticity, compression microbuckling, tension stiffening, or both of the latter two. Fiber compression buckling resulted in smaller loads in the ECM, which were primarily directed toward the neighboring cell. These loads decreased with increasing cell-to-cell distance; when cells were >9 cell diameters apart, no such intercellular interaction was observed. Tension stiffening further contributed to directing the loads toward the neighboring cell, though to a smaller extent. The contraction of two neighboring cells resulted in mutual attraction forces, which were considerably increased by tension stiffening and decayed with increasing cell-to-cell distances. Nonlinear elasticity contributed also to the onset of force polarity on the cell boundaries, manifested by larger contractile forces pointing toward the neighboring cell. The density and alignment of the fibers within the intercellular band were greater when fibers buckled under compression, with tension stiffening further contributing to this structural remodeling. Although previous studies have established the role of the ECM nonlinear mechanical behavior in increasing the range of force transmission, our model demonstrates the contribution of nonlinear elasticity of biological gels to directional and efficient mechanical signal transfer between distant cells, and rehighlights the importance of using fibrous gels in experimental settings for facilitating intercellular communication. VIDEO ABSTRACT.
Force chains (FCs) are a key determinant of the micromechanical properties and behaviour of heterogeneous materials, such as granular systems. However, less is known about FCs in fibrous materials, such as the networks composing the extracellular matrix (ECM) of biological systems. Using a finite-element computational model, we simulated the contraction of a single cell and two nearby cells embedded in two-dimensional fibrous elastic networks and analysed the tensile FCs that developed in the ECM. The role of ECM nonlinear elasticity on FC formation was evaluated by considering linear and nonlinear, i.e. exhibiting ‘buckling’ and/or ‘strain-stiffening’, stress–strain curves. The effect of the degree of cell contraction and network coordination value was assessed. We found that nonlinear elasticity of the ECM fibres influenced the structure of the FCs, facilitating the transition towards more distinct chains that were less branched and more radially oriented than the chains formed in linear elastic networks. When two neighbouring cells contract, a larger number of FCs bridged between the cells in nonlinear networks, and these chains had a larger effective rigidity than the chains that did not reach a neighbouring cell. These results suggest that FCs function as a route for mechanical communication between distant cells and highlight the contribution of ECM fibre nonlinear elasticity to the formation of FCs.
The ability of cells to sense distant neighbors, through the ECM, is a fundamental mechanism in various biological processes. In fibrin, we demonstrate how cell forces deform the matrix and allow for distant cells to be mechanically coupled by the aligned and dense fibers of the matrix. Such long-range coupling influences cellular morphology.
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