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Dive into the research topics where Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro.


Circulation Research | 2008

Nuclear Shape, Mechanics, and Mechanotransduction

Kris Noel Dahl; Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Jan Lammerding

In eukaryotic cells, the nucleus contains the genome and is the site of transcriptional regulation. The nucleus is the largest and stiffest organelle and is exposed to mechanical forces transmitted through the cytoskeleton from outside the cell and from force generation within the cell. Here, we discuss the effect of intra- and extracellular forces on nuclear shape and structure and how these force-induced changes could be implicated in nuclear mechanotransduction, ie, force-induced changes in cell signaling and gene transcription. We review mechanical studies of the nucleus and nuclear structural proteins, such as lamins. Dramatic changes in nuclear shape, organization, and stiffness are seen in cells where lamin proteins are mutated or absent, as in genetically engineered mice, RNA interference studies, or human disease. We examine the different mechanical pathways from the force-responsive cytoskeleton to the nucleus. We also highlight studies that link changes in nuclear shape with cell function during developmental, physiological, and pathological modifications. Together, these studies suggest that the nucleus itself may play an important role in the response of the cell to force.


Cytometry Part A | 2008

Deformation‐based nuclear morphometry: Capturing nuclear shape variation in HeLa cells

Gustavo K. Rohde; Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Kris Noel Dahl; Robert F. Murphy

The empirical characterization of nuclear shape distributions is an important unsolved problem with many applications in biology and medicine. Numerous genetic diseases and cancers have alterations in nuclear morphology, and methods for characterization of morphology could aid in both diagnoses and fundamental understanding of these disorders. Automated approaches have been used to measure features related to the size and shape of the cell nucleus, and statistical analysis of these features has often been performed assuming an underlying Euclidean (linear) vector space. We discuss the difficulties associated with the analysis of nuclear shape in light of the fact that shape spaces are nonlinear, and demonstrate methods for characterizing nuclear shapes and shape distributions based on spatial transformations that map one nucleus to another. By combining large deformation metric mapping with multidimensional scaling we offer a flexible approach for elucidating the intrinsic nonlinear degrees of freedom of a distribution of nuclear shapes. More specifically, we demonstrate approaches for nuclear shape interpolation and computation of mean nuclear shape. We also provide a method for estimating the number of free parameters that contribute to shape as well as an approach for visualizing most representative shape variations within a distribution of nuclei. The proposed methodology can be completely automated, is independent of the dimensionality of the images, and can handle complex shapes. Results obtained by analyzing two sets of images of HeLa cells are shown. In addition to identifying the modes of variation in normal HeLa nuclei, the effects of lamin A/C on nuclear morphology are quantitatively described.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2012

Mechanical characterization of adult stem cells from bone marrow and perivascular niches

Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Steven Tottey; Richard W.E. Taylor; Ryoma Bise; Takeo Kanade; Stephen F. Badylak; Kris Noel Dahl

Therapies using adult stem cells often require mechanical manipulation such as injection or incorporation into scaffolds. However, force-induced rupture and mechanosensitivity of cells during manipulation is largely ignored. Here, we image cell mechanical structures and perform a biophysical characterization of three different types of human adult stem cells: bone marrow CD34+ hematopoietic, bone marrow mesenchymal and perivascular mesenchymal stem cells. We use micropipette aspiration to characterize cell mechanics and quantify deformation of subcellular structures under force and its contribution to global cell deformation. Our results suggest that CD34+ cells are mechanically suitable for injection systems since cells transition from solid- to fluid-like at constant aspiration pressure, probably due to a poorly developed actin cytoskeleton. Conversely, mesenchymal stem cells from the bone marrow and perivascular niches are more suitable for seeding into biomaterial scaffolds since they are mechanically robust and have developed cytoskeletal structures that may allow cellular stable attachment and motility through solid porous environments. Among these, perivascular stem cells cultured in 6% oxygen show a developed cytoskeleton but a more compliant nucleus, which can facilitate the penetration into pores of tissues or scaffolds. We confirm the relevance of our measurements using cell motility and migration assays and measure survival of injected cells. Since different types of adult stem cells can be used for similar applications, we suggest considering mechanical properties of stem cells to match optimal mechanical characteristics of therapies.


international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2010

The nucleus as a central structure in defining the mechanical properties of stem cells

Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Kris Noel Dahl

Manipulation of stem cells is one of the highest goals within biological sciences for the development of devices for the regeneration of injured tissues. In general, the mechanical properties of cells are nowadays recognized to play a role in many cellular phenotypes, including mobility though tissues, survival to mechanical loading and differentiation. Here we present a study where the mechanics of bone marrow CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells (CD34+ cells) and bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) is investigated through micropipette aspiration. The objective was to address the role of the nucleus as a central mechanoactive structure in stem cells. Stem cell nuclei occupy most of the cell volume and present different properties from what is known for somatic cells. Mechanics revealed to be highly dependent on the nucleus, where CD34+ cells revealed to be stiffer than BMSCs for short times under loading assuming elastic behavior and highly viscoelastic for longer times under loading, which present a higher nuclear volume per cell volume ratio. Mechanics was also evaluated for agglomerates of stem cells by aspirating spheres of neural progenitor cells (NSC-Ss). Relatively to single cells, NSC-Ss presented higher deformability, which seems to be more dependent on intracellular connectivity than on cell mechanics. The general character of the reported conclusions is being investigated with other types of stem cells.


Circulation Research | 2017

Multi-Imaging Method to Assay the Contractile Mechanical Output of Micropatterned Human iPSC-Derived Cardiac MyocytesNovelty and Significance

Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Olivier Schwab; Mohammad A. Mandegar; Yen-Sin Ang; Bruce R. Conklin; Deepak Srivastava; Beth L. Pruitt

Rationale: During each beat, cardiac myocytes (CMs) generate the mechanical output necessary for heart function through contractile mechanisms that involve shortening of sarcomeres along myofibrils. Human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) can be differentiated into CMs (hiPSC-CMs) that model cardiac contractile mechanical output more robustly when micropatterned into physiological shapes. Quantifying the mechanical output of these cells enables us to assay cardiac activity in a dish. Objective: We sought to develop a computational platform that integrates analytic approaches to quantify the mechanical output of single micropatterned hiPSC-CMs from microscopy videos. Methods and Results: We micropatterned single hiPSC-CMs on deformable polyacrylamide substrates containing fluorescent microbeads. We acquired videos of single beating cells, of microbead displacement during contractions, and of fluorescently labeled myofibrils. These videos were independently analyzed to obtain parameters that capture the mechanical output of the imaged single cells. We also developed novel methods to quantify sarcomere length from videos of moving myofibrils and to analyze loss of synchronicity of beating in cells with contractile defects. We tested this computational platform by detecting variations in mechanical output induced by drugs and in cells expressing low levels of myosin-binding protein C. Conclusions: Our method can measure the cardiac function of single micropatterned hiPSC-CMs and determine contractile parameters that can be used to elucidate mechanisms that underlie variations in CM function. This platform will be amenable to future studies of the effects of mutations and drugs on cardiac function.


ASME 2010 Summer Bioengineering Conference, Parts A and B | 2010

The Role of Nuclear Stiffness and Resilience in Mechanotransduction

Kris Noel Dahl; Elizabeth A. Booth-Gauthier; Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Zhixia Zhong

Mechanical force is found to be increasingly important during development and for proper homeostatic maintenance of cells and tissues. The nucleus occupies a large volume fraction of the cell and is interconnected with the cytoskeleton. Here, to determine the direct role of the nucleus itself in converting forces to changes in gene expression, also known as, mechanotransduction, we examine changes in nuclear mechanics and gene reorganization associated with cell fate and with extracellular force. We measure mechanics of nuclei in many model cell systems using micropipette aspiration to show changes in nuclear mechanics. In intact cells we characterize the rheological changes induced in the genome organization with live cell imaging and particle tracking, and we suggest how these changes relate to gene expression.Copyright


Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering | 2014

Nuclear stiffening inhibits migration of invasive melanoma cells.

Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Payal Khanna; Aishwarya Sukumar; Cheng Dong; Kris Noel Dahl


Lab on a Chip | 2013

Formation of composite polyacrylamide and silicone substrates for independent control of stiffness and strain

Chelsey S. Simmons; Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Beth L. Pruitt


Archive | 2011

MICROPOST-BASED FUNCTIONAL ASSAY OF ADULT HEART CELLS: DOES MECHANOSENSING LIMIT FORCE PRODUCTION?

Rebecca E. Taylor; Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Giovanni Fajardo; Hedi Razavi; Daniel Bernstein; Beth L. Pruitt


2008 AIChE Annual Meeting, AIChE 100 | 2008

Rheology of adult stem cells and modelling of flow induced deformation

Alexandre J. S. Ribeiro; Ender A. Finol; Kris Noel Dahl

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Kris Noel Dahl

Carnegie Mellon University

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Aishwarya Sukumar

Carnegie Mellon University

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Chelsey S. Simmons

Cardiovascular Institute of the South

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Cheng Dong

Pennsylvania State University

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Ender A. Finol

Carnegie Mellon University

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