“…[ 10 , 20 , 21 ] The current understanding, mainly from studies of bacteria or yeast embedded in hydrogels, indicate that the microbes grow inside the hydrogel network to form dense clusters at slower rates than in suspension. [ 20 , 22 , 23 ] Cell's response to the mechanical properties of their microenvironment is well known from 3D cultures of mammalian cells, whose proliferation, migration, or differentiation programs depend on the viscoelasticity [ 24 ] and the degradation kinetics of the hydrogel network. [ 25 , 26 ] Studies in engineered hydrogels with viscoelastic properties that can be modulated by the type of network crosslinks (reversible/dynamic vs permanent) and by the nature of the degradable sequences have helped to understand and quantify eukaryotic organism's mechanosensitivity range and response.…”