BME Seminar: Elliot Botvinick, Ph.D. - Examination of Pericellular Stiffness in 3D Culture

Time

-

Locations

Wishnick Hall, Room 113 (Auditorium), 3255 South Dearborn, Chicago, IL 60616

Armour College of Engineering's Biomedical Engineering Department will host a seminar featuring Elliot Botvinick, PhD, Associate Professor in the Biomedical Engineering Department at the University of California, Irvine, on Friday, March 2, 2018.

While there is some consensus that bulk stromal stiffness regulates cells, correlations with the pericellular mechanical microenvironment are less clear, in large part due to the difficulty of measurement. My group implements Active Microrheology (AMR, an optical tweezers method) to probe extracellular stiffness and map it in the volume surrounding cells cultured in 3D naturally-derived extracellular matrix (ECM) hydrogels. AMR applies sinusoidal optical forces onto microbeads embedded within ECMs and our group typically studies ECMs comprising fibrin or type 1 collagen. In our experimental system, AMR reports the complex material response of the ECM, relating bead displacement to the applied force, just surrounding each microbead. Because our AMR microscope can probe many beads surrounding each cell, we can map the pericellular mechanical landscape, allowing us to seek correlations between local stiffness distributions and cell processes such as contractility and differentiation. I will present specific examples for which the distribution of pericellular stiffness correlates with cell phenotypes, including MT1-MMP deficient mesenchymal stem cells, human aortic smooth muscle cells with compromised contractility, and human dermal fibroblasts. Additionally, I will present surprising evidence that a cell’s ability to stiffen its local ECM (by as much as one or two orders of magnitude) depends on its ability to degrade that ECM enzymatically. Inhibition of either ECM degradation or cytoskeletal force generation reduces the pericellular stiffness to values typical of a cell-free gel, suggesting that both processes are required for creating a normal pericellular mechanical topography.

Short Bio:

Dr. Botvinick is Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Surgery at the University of California Irvine. His research program has two areas of focus, one in mechanobiology and the other in medical device development. These two efforts occur in his laboratories at the Edwards Lifesciences Center for Advanced Cardiovascular Technology and the Beckman Laser Institute and Medical Clinic. The mechanobiology and medical device efforts generally utilize photonics tools such as nonlinear microscopy, optical tweezers, luminescent reporters, and laser-induced cavitation. The laboratory also develops state-of-the-art instrumentation and devices for quantitative biophysical measurements for the study of mechanobiology. These tools are applied to test mechanical hypotheses in cancer biology, microvascular morphogenesis, tissue engineering, and stem cell biology. Dr. Botvinick co-founded Metronom Health, Inc., which manufactures a fiber-type transcutaneous continuous glucose monitor. 

The Botvinick laboratory is currently funded by the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation to: 

  1. Develop a novel device for the transplantation of pancreatic or stem cells for the treatment of type 1 diabetes, 
  2. Develop sensors of additional signals for the artificial pancreas, including a continuous insulin monitor and 
  3. Develop and test a new material to extend the lifetime of insulin infusion sets.