Journal article
PLoS ONE, 2018
APA
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Bongiorno, T., Gura, J. R., Talwar, P., Chambers, D. M., Young, K. M., Arafat, D., … Sulchek, T. (2018). Biophysical subsets of embryonic stem cells display distinct phenotypic and morphological signatures. PLoS ONE.
Chicago/Turabian
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Bongiorno, Tom, Jeremy R Gura, Priyanka Talwar, Dwight M. Chambers, Katherine M. Young, D. Arafat, Gonghao Wang, et al. “Biophysical Subsets of Embryonic Stem Cells Display Distinct Phenotypic and Morphological Signatures.” PLoS ONE (2018).
MLA
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Bongiorno, Tom, et al. “Biophysical Subsets of Embryonic Stem Cells Display Distinct Phenotypic and Morphological Signatures.” PLoS ONE, 2018.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{tom2018a,
title = {Biophysical subsets of embryonic stem cells display distinct phenotypic and morphological signatures},
year = {2018},
journal = {PLoS ONE},
author = {Bongiorno, Tom and Gura, Jeremy R and Talwar, Priyanka and Chambers, Dwight M. and Young, Katherine M. and Arafat, D. and Wang, Gonghao and Jackson-Holmes, Emily L and Qiu, P. and McDevitt, T. and Sulchek, T.}
}
The highly proliferative and pluripotent characteristics of embryonic stem cells engender great promise for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, but the rapid identification and isolation of target cell phenotypes remains challenging. Therefore, the objectives of this study were to characterize cell mechanics as a function of differentiation and to employ differences in cell stiffness to select population subsets with distinct mechanical, morphological, and biological properties. Biomechanical analysis with atomic force microscopy revealed that embryonic stem cells stiffened within one day of differentiation induced by leukemia inhibitory factor removal, with a lagging but pronounced change from spherical to spindle-shaped cell morphology. A microfluidic device was then employed to sort a differentially labeled mixture of pluripotent and differentiating cells based on stiffness, resulting in pluripotent cell enrichment in the soft device outlet. Furthermore, sorting an unlabeled population of partially differentiated cells produced a subset of “soft” cells that was enriched for the pluripotent phenotype, as assessed by post-sort characterization of cell mechanics, morphology, and gene expression. The results of this study indicate that intrinsic cell mechanical properties might serve as a basis for efficient, high-throughput, and label-free isolation of pluripotent stem cells, which will facilitate a greater biological understanding of pluripotency and advance the potential of pluripotent stem cell differentiated progeny as cell sources for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.