Title of article :
An lower bound on receptor density for stable cell adhesion due
to thermal undulations
Author/Authors :
Yuan Lin، نويسنده , , L. B. Freund، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The adhesion of a living cell to an extracellular
matrix surface is effected through the bonding of receptor
molecules in the cell membrane to compatible ligand
molecules on the surface. In a series of experiments on
adhesion of cells to a substrate surface with a controlled
density of ligand binding sites, Arnold et al. (ChemPhys-
Chem 5:383, 2004) showed that tight cell adhesions could
form only if the areal density of binding sites on the substrate
was higher than some critical value. Furthermore,
this critical value was consistent across the four cell types
examined in the experiments. For ligand density below the
critical level, on the other hand, virtually no adhesions
formed. In this article, we examine the competition
between thermal undulations of the cell membrane and its
adhesion to the substrate. In particular, we show that
thermal undulations destabilize membrane bonding to the
substrate unless the bond spacing is below a certain level.
By following this line of reasoning in the context of classical
statistical mechanics, we obtain an estimate of the
critical value of spacing which is in reasonable agreement
with the observations
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science