Thin bio-artificial tissues in plane stress: The relationship between cell and tissue strain, and an improved constitutive model

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Abstract

Constitutive models are needed to relate the active and passive mechanical properties of cells to the overall mechanical response of bio-artificial tissues. The Zahalak model attempts to explicitly describe this link for a class of bio-artificial tissues. A fundamental assumption made by Zahalak is that cells stretch in perfect registry with a tissue. We show this assumption to be valid only for special cases, and we correct the Zahalak model accordingly. We focus on short-term and very long-term behavior, and therefore consider tissue constituents that are linear in their loading response (although not necessarily linear in unloading). In such cases, the average strain in a cell is related to the macroscopic tissue strain by a scalar we call the "strain factor". We incorporate a model predicting the strain factor into the Zahalak model, and then reinterpret experiments reported by Zahalak and co-workers to determine the in situ stiffness of cells in a tissue construct. We find that, without the modification in this article, the Zahalak model can underpredict cell stiffness by an order of magnitude. © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.

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Marquez, J. P., Genin, G. M., Zahalak, G. I., & Elson, E. L. (2005). Thin bio-artificial tissues in plane stress: The relationship between cell and tissue strain, and an improved constitutive model. Biophysical Journal, 88(2), 765–777. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.104.040808

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