Samenvatting
In this study, human umbilical vein and human saphenous vein endothelial cells ware seeded on glass and exposed to fluid shear in a parallel-plate flow chamber. cell retention, morphology and migration were studied as a function of shear stress and of adhesion time prior to exposure to shear. Three-hour and 24-h adhesion limes gave rise to comparable cell retention values after 2 h of flow for both cell types. Cell retention decreased from 85 to 20% as shear stress increased from 88 to 264 dynes cm(-2) (8.8 to 26 Pa). Mean spreading areas decreased after the onset of flow, but subsequently stabilized to plateau values, which mere smaller at higher shear stresses. Shape factors increased faster to higher values as cells were exposed to higher shear stresses, without any obvious preference in orientation of the cells with respect to the direction of flow. Migration was unidirectional with flow and linear with time. Migration was faster for cells which had adhered for 24 h than for cells which had adhered for 3 h and was accompanied by the presence of fibrillar structures left behind on the surface upstream of migrating cells. It is concluded that after 3 h adhesion to glass, cells have adhered with an adhesion strength that does not substantially increase during tire next 21 h. However, during this time changes in cell-substratum interactions seem to occur judging by the differences in, e.g., migration rates.
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Pagina's (van-tot) | 506-512 |
Aantal pagina's | 7 |
Tijdschrift | Medical Engineering & Physics |
Volume | 16 |
Nummer van het tijdschrift | 6 |
DOI's |
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Status | Published - nov.-1994 |