C. Corey Hardin
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by C. Corey Hardin.
Nature Materials | 2011
Dhananjay Tambe; C. Corey Hardin; Thomas E. Angelini; Kavitha Rajendran; Chan Young Park; Xavier Serra-Picamal; Enhua H. Zhou; Muhammad H. Zaman; James P. Butler; David A. Weitz; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Xavier Trepat
Cells comprising a tissue migrate as part of a collective. How collective processes are coordinated over large multi-cellular assemblies has remained unclear, however, because mechanical stresses exerted at cell-cell junctions have not been accessible experimentally. We report here maps of these stresses within and between cells comprising a monolayer. Within the cell sheet there arise unanticipated fluctuations of mechanical stress that are severe, emerge spontaneously, and ripple across the monolayer. This stress landscape becomes increasingly rugged, sluggish, and cooperative with increasing system density. Within that landscape, local cellular migrations follow local orientations of maximal principal stress. Migrations of both endothelial and epithelial monolayers conform to this behavior, as do breast cancer cell lines before but not after the epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Collective migration in these diverse systems is seen to be governed by a simple but unifying physiological principle: neighboring cells join forces to transmit appreciable normal stress across the cell-cell junction, but migrate along orientations of minimal intercellular shear stress.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Enhua Zhou; Xavier Trepat; Chan Young Young Park; Guillaume Lenormand; Madavi Oliver; Srboljub M. Mijailovich; C. Corey Hardin; David A. Weitz; James P. Butler; Jeffrey J. Fredberg
Mechanical robustness of the cell under different modes of stress and deformation is essential to its survival and function. Under tension, mechanical rigidity is provided by the cytoskeletal network; with increasing stress, this network stiffens, providing increased resistance to deformation. However, a cell must also resist compression, which will inevitably occur whenever cell volume is decreased during such biologically important processes as anhydrobiosis and apoptosis. Under compression, individual filaments can buckle, thereby reducing the stiffness and weakening the cytoskeletal network. However, the intracellular space is crowded with macromolecules and organelles that can resist compression. A simple picture describing their behavior is that of colloidal particles; colloids exhibit a sharp increase in viscosity with increasing volume fraction, ultimately undergoing a glass transition and becoming a solid. We investigate the consequences of these 2 competing effects and show that as a cell is compressed by hyperosmotic stress it becomes progressively more rigid. Although this stiffening behavior depends somewhat on cell type, starting conditions, molecular motors, and cytoskeletal contributions, its dependence on solid volume fraction is exponential in every instance. This universal behavior suggests that compression-induced weakening of the network is overwhelmed by crowding-induced stiffening of the cytoplasm. We also show that compression dramatically slows intracellular relaxation processes. The increase in stiffness, combined with the slowing of relaxation processes, is reminiscent of a glass transition of colloidal suspensions, but only when comprised of deformable particles. Our work provides a means to probe the physical nature of the cytoplasm under compression, and leads to results that are universal across cell type.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Naimish R. Patel; Medhavi Bole; Cheng Chen; C. Corey Hardin; Alvin T. Kho; Justin D. Mih; Linhong Deng; James P. Butler; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Ramaswamy Krishnan; Henryk Koziel
Macrophages serve to maintain organ homeostasis in response to challenges from injury, inflammation, malignancy, particulate exposure, or infection. Until now, receptor ligation has been understood as being the central mechanism that regulates macrophage function. Using macrophages of different origins and species, we report that macrophage elasticity is a major determinant of innate macrophage function. Macrophage elasticity is modulated not only by classical biologic activators such as LPS and IFN-γ, but to an equal extent by substrate rigidity and substrate stretch. Macrophage elasticity is dependent upon actin polymerization and small rhoGTPase activation, but functional effects of elasticity are not predicted by examination of gene expression profiles alone. Taken together, these data demonstrate an unanticipated role for cell elasticity as a common pathway by which mechanical and biologic factors determine macrophage function.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2015
Robert L. Steward; Dhananjay Tambe; C. Corey Hardin; Ramaswamy Krishnan; Jeffrey J. Fredberg
Endothelial cell alignment along the direction of laminar fluid flow is widely understood to be a defining morphological feature of vascular homeostasis. While the role of associated signaling and structural events have been well studied, associated intercellular stresses under laminar fluid shear have remained ill-defined and the role of these stresses in the alignment process has remained obscure. To fill this gap, we report here the tractions as well as the complete in-plane intercellular stress fields measured within the human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) monolayer subjected to a steady laminar fluid shear of 1 Pa. Tractions, intercellular stresses, as well as their time course, heterogeneity, and anisotropy, were measured using monolayer traction microscopy and monolayer stress microscopy. Prior to application of laminar fluid flow, intercellular stresses were largely tensile but fluctuated dramatically in space and in time (317 ± 122 Pa). Within 12 h of the onset of laminar fluid flow, the intercellular stresses decreased substantially but continued to fluctuate dramatically (142 ± 84 Pa). Moreover, tractions and intercellular stresses aligned strongly and promptly (within 1 h) along the direction of fluid flow, whereas the endothelial cell body aligned less strongly and substantially more slowly (12 h). Taken together, these results reveal that steady laminar fluid flow induces prompt reduction in magnitude and alignment of tractions and intercellular stress tensor components followed by the retarded elongation and alignment of the endothelial cell body. Appreciably smaller intercellular stresses supported by cell-cell junctions logically favor smaller incidence of gap formation and thus improved barrier integrity.
Vascular Pharmacology | 2015
Cora M.L. Beckers; Nebojsa Knezevic; Erik T. Valent; Mohammad Tauseef; Ramaswamy Krishnan; Kavitha Rajendran; C. Corey Hardin; Jurjan Aman; Jan van Bezu; Paul Sweetnam; Victor W.M. van Hinsbergh; Dolly Mehta; Geerten P. van Nieuw Amerongen
Rho kinase mediates the effects of inflammatory permeability factors by increasing actomyosin-generated traction forces on endothelial adherens junctions, resulting in disassembly of intercellular junctions and increased vascular leakage. In vitro, this is accompanied by the Rho kinase-driven formation of prominent radial F-actin fibers, but the in vivo relevance of those F-actin fibers has been debated, suggesting other Rho kinase-mediated events to occur in vascular leak. Here, we delineated the contributions of the highly homologous isoforms of Rho kinase (ROCK1 and ROCK2) to vascular hyperpermeability responses. We show that ROCK2, rather than ROCK1 is the critical Rho kinase for regulation of thrombin receptor-mediated vascular permeability. Novel traction force mapping in endothelial monolayers, however, shows that ROCK2 is not required for the thrombin-induced force enhancements. Rather, ROCK2 is pivotal to baseline junctional tension as a novel mechanism by which Rho kinase primes the endothelium for hyperpermeability responses, independent from subsequent ROCK1-mediated contractile stress-fiber formation during the late phase of the permeability response.
NMR in Biomedicine | 2014
Mikayel Dabaghyan; Iga Muradyan; Alan Hrovat; James P. Butler; Eric Frederick; Feng Zhou; Angelos Kyriazis; C. Corey Hardin; Samuel Patz; Mirko I. Hrovat
In this work, we report initial results from a light‐weight, low field magnetic resonance device designed to make relative pulmonary density measurements at the bedside. The development of this device necessarily involves special considerations for the magnet, RF and data acquisition schemes as well as a careful analysis of what is needed to provide useful information in the ICU. A homogeneous field region is created remotely from the surface of the magnet such that when the magnet is placed against the chest, an NMR signal is measured from a small volume in the lung. In order to achieve portability, one must trade off field strength and therefore spatial resolution. We report initial measurements from a ping‐pong ball size region in the lung as a function of lung volume. As expected, we measured decreased signal at larger lung volumes since lung density decreases with increasing lung volume. Using a CPMG sequence with ΔTE=3.5 ms and a 20 echo train, a signal to noise ratio ~1100 was obtained from an 8.8mT planar magnet after signal averaging for 43 s. This is the first demonstration of NMR measurements made on a human lung with a light‐weight planar NMR device. We argue that very low spatial resolution measurements of different lobar lung regions will provide useful diagnostic information for clinicians treating Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome as clinicians want to avoid ventilator pressures that cause either lung over distension (too much pressure) or lung collapse (too little pressure). Copyright
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2018
C. Corey Hardin; Joyjit Chattoraj; Greeshma Manomohan; Jader Colombo; Trong Nguyen; Dhananjay Tambe; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Konstantin G. Birukov; James P. Butler; Emanuela Del Gado; Ramaswamy Krishnan
In endothelial gap formation, local tractions exerted by the cell upon its basal adhesions are thought to exceed balancing tensile stresses exerted across the cell-cell junction, thus causing the junction to rupture. To test this idea, we mapped evolving tractions, intercellular stresses, and corresponding growth of paracellular gaps in response to agonist challenge. Contrary to expectation, we found little to no relationship between local tensile stresses and gap formation. Instead, we discovered that intercellular stresses were aligned into striking multi-cellular domains punctuated by defects in stress alignment. Surprisingly, gaps emerged preferentially not at stress hotspots, as predicted, but rather at stress defects. This unexpected behavior is captured by a minimal model of the cell layer as a jammed assembly of cohesive particles undergoing plastic rearrangements under tension. Together, experiments and model suggest a new physical picture in which gap formation, and its consequent effect on endothelial permeability, is determined not by a local stress imbalance at a cell-cell junction but rather by emergence of non-local, cooperative stress reorganization across the cellular collective.
Physical Review E | 2011
Guillaume Lenormand; Emil Millet; Chan Young Park; C. Corey Hardin; James P. Butler; Nicanor I. Moldovan; Jeffrey J. Fredberg
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2018
C. Corey Hardin; Kathryn Hibbert
Respiratory Care | 2008
C. Corey Hardin; R. Scott Harris