Measurement of tissue viscosity to relate force and motion in collective cell migration
Molly McCord, Jacob Notbohm

TL;DR
This study introduces a method to measure tissue viscosity in epithelial monolayers, helping to distinguish between active forces and material response, and linking microstructure to mechanical properties.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental measurement of tissue viscosity, enabling separation of active and constitutive stress components in collective cell migration.
Findings
Tissue viscosity is approximately 100 Pa-hr.
Increasing actomyosin or cell adhesions raises viscosity.
Decreasing these components lowers viscosity.
Abstract
In tissue development, wound healing, and cancer invasion, coordinated cell motion arises from active forces produced by the cells. The relationship between force and motion remains unclear, however, because the forces result from a sum of contributions from activity and the constitutive response of the cell collective. Here, we develop a method to decouple the forces due to activity from those due to constitutive response. As a model of an epithelial tissue, we use a monolayer of epithelial cells in the fluid state, for which the constitutive behavior is that of a viscous fluid. By careful study of the distribution of the ratio between shear stress and strain rate, we show that the order of magnitude of viscosity within the epithelial tissue is 100 Pa-hr and that increasing (decreasing) the actomyosin cytoskeleton and cell-cell adhesions increase (decrease) the magnitude of tissue…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Micro and Nano Robotics · Mathematical Biology Tumor Growth
