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  5. Frequency-induced morphology alterations in microconfined biological cells
 
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Frequency-induced morphology alterations in microconfined biological cells

Source
Medical and Biological Engineering and Computing
ISSN
01400118
Date Issued
2019-04-11
Author(s)
Banerjee, Hritwick
Roy, Bibhas
Chaudhury, Kaustav
Srinivasan, Babji
Chakraborty, Suman
Ren, Hongliang
DOI
10.1007/s11517-018-1908-y
Volume
57
Issue
4
Abstract
Low-intensity therapeutic ultrasound has demonstrated an impetus in bone signaling and tissue healing for decades now. Though this technology is clinically well proven, still there are breaches in studies to understand the fundamental principle of how osteoblast tissue regenerates physiologically at the cellular level with ultrasound interaction as a form of acoustic wave stimuli. Through this article, we illustrate an analysis for cytomechanical changes of cell membrane periphery as a basic first physical principle for facilitating late downstream biochemical pathways. With the help of in situ single-cell direct analysis in a microfluidic confinement, we demonstrate that alteration of low-intensity pulse ultrasound (LIPUS) frequency would physically perturb cell membrane and establish inherent cell oscillation. We experimentally demonstrate here that, at LIPUS resonance near 1.7 MHz (during 1–3 MHz alteration), cell membrane area would expand to 6.85 ± 0.7% during ultrasound exposure while it contracts 44.68 ± 0.8% in post actuation. Conversely, cell cross-sectional area change (%) from its previous morphology during and after switching off LIPUS was reversibly different before and after resonance. For instance, at 1.5 MHz, LIPUS exposure produced 1.44 ± 0.5% expansion while in contrast 2 MHz instigates 1.6 ± 0.3% contraction. We conclude that alteration of LIPUS frequency from 1–3 MHz keeping other ultrasound parameters like exposure time, pulse repetition frequency (PRF), etc., constant, if applied to a microconfined biological single living cell, would perturb physical structure reversibly based on the system resonance during and post exposure ultrasound pulsing. We envision, in the near future, our results would constitute the foundation of mechanistic effects of low-intensity therapeutic ultrasound and its allied potential in medical applications. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
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URI
http://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/IITG2025/22656
Subjects
Cellular morphology | LIPUS | Microfluidic confinement | Ultrasound therapy
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