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Dive into the research topics where Emil Millet is active.

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Featured researches published by Emil Millet.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2004

Linearity and time-scale invariance of the creep function in living cells.

Guillaume Lenormand; Emil Millet; Ben Fabry; James P. Butler; Jeffrey J. Fredberg

We report here the creep function measured in three cell types, after a variety of interventions, and over three time decades (from 3ms to 3.2 s). In each case the response conformed to a power law, implying that no distinct molecular relaxation times or time constants could characterize the response. These results add to a growing body of evidence that stands in contrast to widely used viscoelastic models featuring at most a few time constants. We show instead that the ability of the matrix to deform is time-scale invariant and characterized by only one parameter: the power law exponent that controls the transition between solid-like and liquid-like behaviour. Moreover, we validate linearity by comparison of measurements in the time and frequency domains.


Nature Materials | 2013

Propulsion and navigation within the advancing monolayer sheet

Jae Hun Kim; Xavier Serra-Picamal; Dhananjay Tambe; Enhua Zhou; Chan Young Young Park; Monirosadat Sadati; Jin-Ah Park; Ramaswamy Krishnan; Bomi Gweon; Emil Millet; James P. Butler; Xavier Trepat; Jeffrey J. Fredberg

As a wound heals, or a body plan forms, or a tumor invades, observed cellular motions within the advancing cell swarm are thought to stem from yet to be observed physical stresses that act in some direct and causal mechanical fashion. Here we show that such a relationship between motion and stress is far from direct. Using monolayer stress microscopy, we probed migration velocities, cellular tractions and intercellular stresses in an epithelial cell sheet advancing towards an island on which cells cannot adhere. We found that cells located near the island exert tractions that pull systematically towards this island regardless of whether the cells approach the island, migrate tangentially along its edge or, paradoxically, recede from it. This unanticipated cell-patterning motif, which we call kenotaxis, represents the robust and systematic mechanical drive of the cellular collective to fill unfilled space.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Monolayer stress microscopy: limitations, artifacts, and accuracy of recovered intercellular stresses

Dhananjay Tambe; Ugo Croutelle; Xavier Trepat; Chan Young Young Park; Jae Hun Kim; Emil Millet; James P. Butler; Jeffrey J. Fredberg

In wound healing, tissue growth, and certain cancers, the epithelial or the endothelial monolayer sheet expands. Within the expanding monolayer sheet, migration of the individual cell is strongly guided by physical forces imposed by adjacent cells. This process is called plithotaxis and was discovered using Monolayer Stress Microscopy (MSM). MSM rests upon certain simplifying assumptions, however, concerning boundary conditions, cell material properties and system dimensionality. To assess the validity of these assumptions and to quantify associated errors, here we report new analytical, numerical, and experimental investigations. For several commonly used experimental monolayer systems, the simplifying assumptions used previously lead to errors that are shown to be quite small. Out-of-plane components of displacement and traction fields can be safely neglected, and characteristic features of intercellular stresses that underlie plithotaxis remain largely unaffected. Taken together, these findings validate Monolayer Stress Microscopy within broad but well-defined limits of applicability.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2010

Mapping the cytoskeletal prestress

Chan Young Park; Dhananjay Tambe; Adriano M. Alencar; Xavier Trepat; En Hua Zhou; Emil Millet; James P. Butler; Jeffrey J. Fredberg

Cell mechanical properties on a whole cell basis have been widely studied, whereas local intracellular variations have been less well characterized and are poorly understood. To fill this gap, here we provide detailed intracellular maps of regional cytoskeleton (CSK) stiffness, loss tangent, and rate of structural rearrangements, as well as their relationships to the underlying regional F-actin density and the local cytoskeletal prestress. In the human airway smooth muscle cell, we used micropatterning to minimize geometric variation. We measured the local cell stiffness and loss tangent with optical magnetic twisting cytometry and the local rate of CSK remodeling with spontaneous displacements of a CSK-bound bead. We also measured traction distributions with traction microscopy and cell geometry with atomic force microscopy. On the basis of these experimental observations, we used finite element methods to map for the first time the regional distribution of intracellular prestress. Compared with the cell center or edges, cell corners were systematically stiffer and more fluidlike and supported higher traction forces, and at the same time had slower remodeling dynamics. Local remodeling dynamics had a close inverse relationship with local cell stiffness. The principal finding, however, is that systematic regional variations of CSK stiffness correlated only poorly with regional F-actin density but strongly and linearly with the regional prestress. Taken together, these findings in the intact cell comprise the most comprehensive characterization to date of regional variations of cytoskeletal mechanical properties and their determinants.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2010

Biomechanical effects of environmental and engineered particles on human airway smooth muscle cells

Peter Berntsen; Chan Young Young Park; Barbara Rothen-Rutishauser; Akira Tsuda; T. M. Sager; Ramon M. Molina; Thomas C. Donaghey; Adriano M. Alencar; David I. Kasahara; Thomas Ericsson; Emil Millet; Jan Swenson; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; James P. Butler; Joseph D. Brain; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Peter Gehr; Enhua Zhou

The past decade has seen significant increases in combustion-generated ambient particles, which contain a nanosized fraction (less than 100 nm), and even greater increases have occurred in engineered nanoparticles (NPs) propelled by the booming nanotechnology industry. Although inhalation of these particulates has become a public health concern, human health effects and mechanisms of action for NPs are not well understood. Focusing on the human airway smooth muscle cell, here we show that the cellular mechanical function is altered by particulate exposure in a manner that is dependent upon particle material, size and dose. We used Alamar Blue assay to measure cell viability and optical magnetic twisting cytometry to measure cell stiffness and agonist-induced contractility. The eight particle species fell into four categories, based on their respective effect on cell viability and on mechanical function. Cell viability was impaired and cell contractility was decreased by (i) zinc oxide (40–100 nm and less than 44 μm) and copper(II) oxide (less than 50 nm); cell contractility was decreased by (ii) fluorescent polystyrene spheres (40 nm), increased by (iii) welding fumes and unchanged by (iv) diesel exhaust particles, titanium dioxide (25 nm) and copper(II) oxide (less than 5 μm), although in none of these cases was cell viability impaired. Treatment with hydrogen peroxide up to 500 μM did not alter viability or cell mechanics, suggesting that the particle effects are unlikely to be mediated by particle-generated reactive oxygen species. Our results highlight the susceptibility of cellular mechanical function to particulate exposures and suggest that direct exposure of the airway smooth muscle cells to particulates may initiate or aggravate respiratory diseases.


Inhalation Toxicology | 2010

Cardiac Oxidative Stress and Dysfunction by Fine Concentrated Ambient Particles (CAPs) are Mediated by Angiotensin-II

Elisa Ghelfi; Gregory A. Wellenius; Joy Lawrence; Emil Millet; Beatriz González-Flecha

Inhalation exposure to fine concentrated ambient particles (CAPs) increases cardiac oxidants by mechanisms involving modulation of the sympathovagal tone on the heart. Angiotensin-II is a potent vasoconstrictor and a sympatho-excitatory peptide involved in the regulation of blood pressure. We hypothesized that increases in angiotensin-II after fine particulate matter (PM) exposure could be involved in the development of cardiac oxidative stress. Adult rats were treated with an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor (benazepril®), or an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB; valsartan®) before exposure to fine PM aerosols or filtered air. Exposures were carried out for 5 hours in the chamber of the Harvard fine particle concentrator (fine PM mass concentration: 440 ± 80 μg/m3). At the end of the exposure the animals were tested for in situ chemiluminescence (CL) of the heart, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) and for plasma levels of angiotensin-II. Also, continuous electrocardiogram (ECG) measurements were collected on a subgroup of exposed animals. PM exposure was associated with statistically significant increases in plasma angiotensin concentrations. Pre-treatment with the ACE inhibitor effectively lowered angiotensin concentration, whereas ARB treatment led to increases in angiotensin above the PM-only level. PM exposure also led to significant increases in heart oxidative stress (CL, TBARS), and a shortening of the T-end to T-peak interval on the ECG that were prevented by treatment with both the ACE inhibitor and ARB. These results show that ambient fine particles can increase plasma levels of angiotensin-II and suggest a role of the renin–angiotensin system in the development of particle-related acute cardiac events.


Soft Matter | 2016

Non-equilibrium cytoquake dynamics in cytoskeletal remodeling and stabilization

Adriano M. Alencar; Mariana Ferraz; Chan Young Park; Emil Millet; Xavier Trepat; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; James P. Butler

The cytoskeleton (CSK) is a tensed fiber framework that supports, shapes and stabilizes the cell. The CSK is in a constant state of remodeling, moreover, which is an active non-equilibrium thermodynamic process. We report here that cytoskeletal remodeling involves reconfigurations that are not only sudden but also are transmitted to great distances within the cell in a fashion reminiscent of quakes in the Earths crust. Remarkably, these events in the cell conform both qualitatively and quantitatively to empirical laws typical of earthquakes, including hierarchical fault structures, cumulative energy distributions following the Gutenberg-Richter law, and rate of after-shocks following Omoris law. While it is well-established that remodeling and stabilization of the cytoskeleton are non-equilibrium process, these new unanticipated observations establish that these processes are also remarkably non-local and strongly cooperative.


Nature Physics | 2009

Physical forces during collective cell migration

Xavier Trepat; Michael R. Wasserman; Thomas E. Angelini; Emil Millet; David A. Weitz; James P. Butler; Jeffrey J. Fredberg


Physical Review E | 2003

Time scale and other invariants of integrative mechanical behavior in living cells

Ben Fabry; Geoffrey N. Maksym; James P. Butler; Michael Glogauer; Daniel Navajas; Nathan Taback; Emil Millet; Jeffrey J. Fredberg


Nature Materials | 2006

Fast and slow dynamics of the cytoskeleton

Linhong Deng; Xavier Trepat; James P. Butler; Emil Millet; Kathleen G. Morgan; David A. Weitz; Jeffrey J. Fredberg

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Ben Fabry

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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