Effect of Serum Starvation on Rheology of Cell Monolayers
Abhimanyu Kiran, Chandra Shekhar, Manigandan Sabapathy, Manoranjan, Mishra, Lalit Kumar, Navin Kumar, and Vishwajeet Mehandia

TL;DR
This study investigates how serum starvation affects the mechanical properties of cell monolayers, revealing that nutrient deprivation weakens their viscoelasticity and impairs recovery after deformation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the biomechanical changes in cell monolayers caused by serum deprivation, using rheological experiments to quantify these effects.
Findings
Serum starvation decreases storage and loss moduli of cell monolayers.
Nutrient deprivation leads to incomplete recovery after deformation.
Healthy cells with full serum maintain strength and flexibility.
Abstract
The rheological properties of cells and tissues are central to embryonic development and homoeostasis in adult tissues and organs and are closely related to their physiological activities. In this work, we present our study of rheological experiments on cell monolayer under serum starvation compared to that of healthy cell monolayer with full serum. The normal functioning of cells depends on the micronutrient supply provided by the serum in the growth media. Serum starvation is one of the most widely used procedures in cell biology. Serum deficiency may lead to genomic instability, variation in protein expression, chronic diseases, and some specific types of cancers. However, the effect of deprivation of serum concentration on the material properties of cells is still unknown. Therefore, we performed the macro-rheology experiments to investigate the effect of serum starvation on a fully…
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