Abstract

Throughout life, the body is subjected to various mechanical forces on the organ, tissue, and cellular level. Mechanical stimuli are essential for organ development and function. One organ whose function depends on the tightly connected interplay between mechanical cell properties, biochemical signaling, and external forces is the lung. However, altered mechanical properties or excessive mechanical forces can also drive the onset and progression of severe pulmonary diseases. Characterizing the mechanical properties and forces that affect cell and tissue function is therefore necessary for understanding physiological and pathophysiological mechanisms. In recent years, multiple methods have been developed for cellular force measurements at multiple length scales, from subcellular forces to measuring the collective behavior of heterogeneous cellular networks. In this short review, we give a brief overview of the mechanical forces at play on the cellular level in the lung. We then focus on the technological aspects of measuring cellular forces at many length scales. We describe tools with a subcellular resolution and elaborate measurement techniques for collective multicellular units. Many of the technologies described are by no means restricted to lung research and have already been applied successfully to cells from various other tissues. However, integrating the knowledge gained from these multi-scale measurements in a unifying framework is still a major future challenge.

Highlights

  • Throughout life, the lung is exposed to mechanical forces

  • Mechanical forces play an important role in lung development, maturation, and function and can contribute to the pathogenesis of lung disease

  • Understanding lung mechanics has played a central role in understanding lung biology and respiratory physiology [1]

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Summary

Introduction

Throughout life, the lung is exposed to mechanical forces. Mechanical forces play an important role in lung development, maturation, and function and can contribute to the pathogenesis of lung disease. A plethora of in vitro assays have identified the mechanical properties of lung cells, extracellular matrix, and lung tissues and highlighted the mechanisms of the mechanotransduction in the lung [12] Based on these findings, many studies inferred detailed cellular responses to specific mechanical forces. A detailed understanding and characterization of the mechanical forces affecting the cellular responses is necessary to differentiate between physiological and pathophysiological stimuli and to better translate the findings from in vitro models to the actual in vivo situation [13]. In this short review, we give a brief overview of the mechanical forces at play on the cellular level in the lung. We want to emphasize that many of the technologies described are by no means restricted to lung research and have already been applied successfully to cells from various other tissues

Forces on Lung Cells and Tissue
Cellular Force Measurement
Active Cellular Force Probing
Passive Cellular Force Mapping
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