Enhua H. Zhou
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Enhua H. Zhou.
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.
Progress in Retinal and Eye Research | 2015
W. Daniel Stamer; Sietse T. Braakman; Enhua H. Zhou; C. Ross Ethier; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Darryl R. Overby; Mark Johnson
Ocular hypertension in glaucoma develops due to age-related cellular dysfunction in the conventional outflow tract, resulting in increased resistance to aqueous humor outflow. Two cell types, trabecular meshwork (TM) and Schlemms canal (SC) endothelia, interact in the juxtacanalicular tissue (JCT) region of the conventional outflow tract to regulate outflow resistance. Unlike endothelial cells lining the systemic vasculature, endothelial cells lining the inner wall of SC support a transcellular pressure gradient in the basal to apical direction, thus acting to push the cells off their basal lamina. The resulting biomechanical strain in SC cells is quite large and is likely to be an important determinant of endothelial barrier function, outflow resistance and intraocular pressure. This review summarizes recent work demonstrating how biomechanical properties of SC cells impact glaucoma. SC cells are highly contractile, and such contraction greatly increases cell stiffness. Elevated cell stiffness in glaucoma may reduce the strain experienced by SC cells, decrease the propensity of SC cells to form pores, and thus impair the egress of aqueous humor from the eye. Furthermore, SC cells are sensitive to the stiffness of their local mechanical microenvironment, altering their own cell stiffness and modulating gene expression in response. Significantly, glaucomatous SC cells appear to be hyper-responsive to substrate stiffness. Thus, evidence suggests that targeting the material properties of SC cells will have therapeutic benefits for lowering intraocular pressure in glaucoma.
Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014
Enhua H. Zhou; Christa Watson; Richard Pizzo; Joel E. Cohen; Quynh Dang; Pedro Macul Ferreira de Barros; Chan Young Park; Cheng Chen; Joseph D. Brain; James P. Butler; Jeffrey W. Ruberti; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Philip Demokritou
AIM As engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) increasingly enter consumer products, humans become increasingly exposed. The first line of defense against ENPs is the epithelium, the integrity of which can be compromised by wounds induced by trauma, infection, or surgery, but the implications of ENPs on wound healing are poorly understood. MATERIALS & METHODS Herein, we developed an in vitro assay to assess the impact of ENPs on the wound healing of cells from human cornea. RESULTS & DISCUSSION We show that industrially relevant ENPs impeded wound healing and cellular migration in a manner dependent on the composition, dose and size of the ENPs as well as cell type. CuO and ZnO ENPs impeded both viability and wound healing for both fibroblasts and epithelial cells. Carboxylated polystyrene ENPs retarded wound healing of corneal fibroblasts without affecting viability. CONCLUSION Our results highlight the impact of ENPs on cellular wound healing and provide useful tools for studying the physiological impact of ENPs.
Soft Matter | 2012
Natalya Mizrahi; Enhua H. Zhou; Guillaume Lenormand; Ramaswamy Krishnan; Daphne Weihs; James P. Butler; David A. Weitz; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Eitan Kimmel
Therapeutic ultrasound is widely employed in clinical applications but its mechanism of action remains unclear. Here we report prompt fluidization of a cell and dramatic acceleration of its remodeling dynamics when exposed to low intensity ultrasound. These physical changes are caused by very small strains (10-5) at ultrasonic frequencies (106 Hz), but are closely analogous to those caused by relatively large strains (10-1) at physiological frequencies (100 Hz). Moreover, these changes are reminiscent of rejuvenation and aging phenomena that are well-established in certain soft inert materials. As such, we suggest cytoskeletal fluidization together with resulting acceleration of cytoskeletal remodeling events as a mechanism contributing to the salutary effects of low intensity therapeutic ultrasound.
Nature Materials | 2013
Enhua H. Zhou; Fernando D. Martinez; Jeffrey J. Fredberg
The cytoplasm of living cells responds to deformation in much the same way as a water-filled sponge does. This behaviour, although intuitive, is connected to long-standing and unsolved fundamental questions in cell mechanics.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Ming Guo; Adrian F. Pegoraro; Angelo Mao; Enhua H. Zhou; Praveen R. Arany; Yulong Han; Dylan T. Burnette; Mikkel H. Jensen; Karen E. Kasza; Jeffrey R. Moore; F. C. MacKintosh; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; David J. Mooney; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; David A. Weitz
Significance Cell volume is thought to be a well-controlled cellular characteristic, increasing as a cell grows, while macromolecular density is maintained. We report that cell volume can also change in response to external physical cues, leading to water influx/efflux, which causes significant changes in subcellular macromolecular density. This is observed when cells spread out on a substrate: Cells reduce their volume and increase their molecular crowding due to an accompanying water efflux. Exploring this phenomenon further, we removed water from mesenchymal stem cells through osmotic pressure and found this was sufficient to alter their differentiation pathway. Based on these results, we suggest cells chart different differentiation and behavioral pathways by sensing/altering their cytoplasmic volume and density through changes in water influx/efflux. Cells alter their mechanical properties in response to their local microenvironment; this plays a role in determining cell function and can even influence stem cell fate. Here, we identify a robust and unified relationship between cell stiffness and cell volume. As a cell spreads on a substrate, its volume decreases, while its stiffness concomitantly increases. We find that both cortical and cytoplasmic cell stiffness scale with volume for numerous perturbations, including varying substrate stiffness, cell spread area, and external osmotic pressure. The reduction of cell volume is a result of water efflux, which leads to a corresponding increase in intracellular molecular crowding. Furthermore, we find that changes in cell volume, and hence stiffness, alter stem-cell differentiation, regardless of the method by which these are induced. These observations reveal a surprising, previously unidentified relationship between cell stiffness and cell volume that strongly influences cell biology.
Integrative Biology | 2015
Chan Young Park; Enhua H. Zhou; Dhananjay Tambe; Bohao Chen; Tera L. Lavoie; Maria L. Dowell; Anton Simeonov; David J. Maloney; Aleksandar Marinkovic; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Stephanie Burger; Matthew Frykenberg; James P. Butler; W. Daniel Stamer; Mark Johnson; Julian Solway; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Ramaswamy Krishnan
When cellular contractile forces are central to pathophysiology, these forces comprise a logical target of therapy. Nevertheless, existing high-throughput screens are limited to upstream signalling intermediates with poorly defined relationships to such a physiological endpoint. Using cellular force as the target, here we report a new screening technology and demonstrate its applications using human airway smooth muscle cells in the context of asthma and Schlemms canal endothelial cells in the context of glaucoma. This approach identified several drug candidates for both asthma and glaucoma. We attained rates of 1000 compounds per screening day, thus establishing a force-based cellular platform for high-throughput drug discovery.
Biophysical Journal | 2014
John C. Mathai; Enhua H. Zhou; Weiqun Yu; Jae Hun Kim; Ge Zhou; Yi Liao; Tung-Tien Sun; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Mark L. Zeidel
Urinary bladder undergoes dramatic volume changes during filling and voiding cycles. In the bladder the luminal surface of terminally differentiated urothelial umbrella cells is almost completely covered by plaques. These plaques (500 to 1000 nm) are made of a family of proteins called uroplakins that are known to form a tight barrier to prevent leakage of water and solutes. Electron micrographs from previous studies show these plaques to be interconnected by hinge regions to form structures that appear rigid, but these same structures must accommodate large changes in cell shape during voiding and filling cycles. To resolve this paradox, we measured the stiffness of the intact, living urothelial apical membrane and found it to be highly deformable, even more so than the red blood cell membrane. The intermediate cells underlying the umbrella cells do not have uroplakins but their membranes are an order of magnitude stiffer. Using uroplakin knockout mouse models we show that cell compliance is conferred by uroplakins. This hypercompliance may be essential for the maintenance of barrier function under dramatic cell deformation during filling and voiding of the bladder.
Archive | 2015
Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Ben Fabry; Geoffrey N. Maksym; Stephanie A. Shore; Paul E. Moore; Mark Johnson; Jae Hun Kim; C. Ross Ethier; W. Daniel Stamer; Sietse T. Braakman; Ritika Gupta; Kristin Perkumas; Joseph M. Sherwood; R. Overby; Enhua H. Zhou; Rocio Vargas-Pinto; Ryan M. Pedrigi; Rudolf Fuchshofer; Cheng Chen; Jing Xie; Ravikumar Rajappa; Linhong Deng; Jeffrey Fredberg; Liu Yang
Archive | 2014
Enhua H. Zhou; Richard Pizzo; Quynh Dang; Macul Ferreira de Barros; Chan Young Park; Joseph D. Brain; P Butler; Jeffrey W. Ruberti; Jeffrey J. Fredberg