In-silico modeling of the micromechanics of fibrous scaffolds and stiffness sensing by cells
Dhruba Jyoti Mech, Mohd Suhail Rizvi

TL;DR
This study uses computational models to analyze how fibrous scaffold structure influences mechanical properties and how cells sense stiffness, revealing differences between macroscopic measurements and cellular perception crucial for tissue engineering.
Contribution
The paper introduces a combined discrete network and finite element modeling approach to link scaffold microstructure with macroscopic and cellular-level mechanical responses.
Findings
Macroscopic elastic modulus depends on shape, size, and fiber fusion.
Deformation under microscopic forces is anisotropic and orientation-dependent.
Cell stiffness sensing varies with fixed strain versus fixed stress conditions.
Abstract
Mechanical properties of the tissue engineering scaffolds are known to play a crucial role in tissue regeneration. Here, we have utilized discrete network and finite element models to study fibrous scaffold mechanics and its dependence on structure. We have considered two loading conditions, first, uniaxial elongation (macroscopic), and second, localized cellular forces (microscopic). Using these two scenarios, we have tried to establish a link between scaffold micromechanics and its macroscopic mechanical properties. We have demonstrated that the macroscopic elastic modulus of fibrous scaffold is dependent on the sample shape, size and the degree of fiber fusion. Under microscopic loading conditions the deformation of the fibrous scaffolds is anisotropic with an orientation dependent decay with distance. Further, we explored the stiffness sensing under the conditions of fixed stress or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Elasticity and Material Modeling
