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Dive into the research topics where Jeremy Cribb is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeremy Cribb.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

Thin-foil magnetic force system for high-numerical-aperture microscopy

Jason Fisher; Jeremy Cribb; Kalpit Desai; Leandra Vicci; B. Wilde; Kurtis Keller; Russell M. Taylor; Julian Haase; Kerry Bloom; E. Timothy O'Brien; Richard Superfine

Forces play a key role in a wide range of biological phenomena from single-protein conformational dynamics to transcription and cell division, to name a few. The majority of existing microbiological force application methods can be divided into two categories: those that can apply relatively high forces through the use of a physical connection to a probe and those that apply smaller forces with a detached probe. Existing magnetic manipulators utilizing high fields and high field gradients have been able to reduce this gap in maximum applicable force, but the size of such devices has limited their use in applications where high force and high-numerical-aperture (NA) microscopy must be combined. We have developed a magnetic manipulation system that is capable of applying forces in excess of 700 pN on a 1 mum paramagnetic particle and 13 nN on a 4.5 mum paramagnetic particle, forces over the full 4pi sr, and a bandwidth in excess of 3 kHz while remaining compatible with a commercially available high-NA microscope objective. Our system design separates the pole tips from the flux coils so that the magnetic-field geometry at the sample is determined by removable thin-foil pole plates, allowing easy change from experiment to experiment. In addition, we have combined the magnetic manipulator with a feedback-enhanced, high-resolution (2.4 nm), high-bandwidth (10 kHz), long-range (100 mum xyz range) laser tracking system. We demonstrate the usefulness of this system in a study of the role of forces in higher-order chromosome structure and function.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

High throughput system for magnetic manipulation of cells, polymers, and biomaterials

Richard Chasen Spero; Leandra Vicci; Jeremy Cribb; David Bober; Vinay Swaminathan; E. Timothy O’Brien; Stephen L. Rogers; Richard Superfine

In the past decade, high throughput screening (HTS) has changed the way biochemical assays are performed, but manipulation and mechanical measurement of micro- and nanoscale systems have not benefited from this trend. Techniques using microbeads (particles approximately 0.1-10 mum) show promise for enabling high throughput mechanical measurements of microscopic systems. We demonstrate instrumentation to magnetically drive microbeads in a biocompatible, multiwell magnetic force system. It is based on commercial HTS standards and is scalable to 96 wells. Cells can be cultured in this magnetic high throughput system (MHTS). The MHTS can apply independently controlled forces to 16 specimen wells. Force calibrations demonstrate forces in excess of 1 nN, predicted force saturation as a function of pole material, and powerlaw dependence of F approximately r(-2.7+/-0.1). We employ this system to measure the stiffness of SR2+ Drosophila cells. MHTS technology is a key step toward a high throughput screening system for micro- and nanoscale biophysical experiments.


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2010

Cylinders vs. spheres : biofluid shear thinning in driven nanoparticle transport

Jeremy Cribb; Timothy D. Meehan; Sheel M. Shah; Kwan Skinner; Richard Superfine

Increasingly, the research community applies magnetophoresis to micro and nanoscale particles for drug delivery applications and the nanoscale rheological characterization of complex biological materials. Of particular interest is the design and transport of these magnetic particles through entangled polymeric fluids commonly found in biological systems. We report the magnetophoretic transport of spherical and rod-shaped particles through viscoelastic, entangled solutions using lambda-phage DNA (λ-DNA) as a model system. In order to understand and predict the observed phenomena, we fully characterize three fundamental components: the magnetic field and field gradient, the shape and magnetic properties of the probe particles, and the macroscopic rheology of the solution. Particle velocities obtained in Newtonian solutions correspond to macroscale rheology, with forces calculated via Stokes Law. In λ-DNA solutions, nanorod velocities are 100 times larger than predicted by measured zero-shear viscosity. These results are consistent with particles experiencing transport through a shear thinning fluid, indicating magnetically driven transport in shear thinning may be especially effective and favor narrow diameter, high aspect ratio particles. A complete framework for designing single-particle magnetic-based delivery systems results when we combine a quantified magnetic system with qualified particles embedded in a characterized viscoelastic medium.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2008

Chapter 16: Magnetic manipulation for force measurements in cell biology.

E. Tim O'Brien; Jeremy Cribb; David Marshburn; Russell M. Taylor; Richard Superfine

Life is a mechanical process. Cells, tissues, and bodies must act within their environments to grow, divide, move, communicate, and defend themselves. The stiffness and viscosity of cells and biologic materials will vary depending upon a wide variety of variables including for example environmental conditions, activation of signaling pathways, stage of development, gene expression. By pushing and pulling cells or materials such as mucus or extracellular matrix, one can learn about their mechanical properties. By varying the conditions, signaling pathways or genetic background, one can also assess how the response of the cell or material is modulated by that pathway. Magnetic particles are available commercially in many useful sizes, magnetic contents, and surface chemistries. The variety of surface chemistries allow forces to be applied to a specimen through specific linkages such as receptors or particular proteins, allowing the biologist to ask fundamental questions about the role of those linkages in the transduction of force or motion. In this chapter, we discuss the use of a magnetic system designed to apply a wide range of forces and force patterns fully integrated into a high numerical aperture inverted fluorescence microscope. Fine, thin and flat magnetic poles allow the use of high magnification microscope objectives, and flexible software to control the direction and pattern of applied forces supports a variety of experimental situations. The system can be coupled with simple video acquisition for medium-bandwidth, two-dimensional particle tracking. Alternatively, the system can be coupled with a laser tracking and position feedback system for higher resolution, high bandwidth, three-dimensional tracking.


Blood | 2017

Elevated hematocrit enhances platelet accumulation following vascular injury

Bethany L. Walton; Marcus Lehmann; Tyler Skorczewski; Lori A. Holle; Joan D. Beckman; Jeremy Cribb; Micah J. Mooberry; Adam R. Wufsus; Brian C. Cooley; Jonathan W. Homeister; Rafal Pawlinski; Michael R. Falvo; Nigel S. Key; Aaron L. Fogelson; Keith B. Neeves; Alisa S. Wolberg

Red blood cells (RBCs) demonstrate procoagulant properties in vitro, and elevated hematocrit is associated with reduced bleeding and increased thrombosis risk in humans. These observations suggest RBCs contribute to thrombus formation. However, effects of RBCs on thrombosis are difficult to assess because humans and mice with elevated hematocrit typically have coexisting pathologies. Using an experimental model of elevated hematocrit in healthy mice, we measured effects of hematocrit in 2 in vivo clot formation models. We also assessed thrombin generation, platelet-thrombus interactions, and platelet accumulation in thrombi ex vivo, in vitro, and in silico. Compared with controls, mice with elevated hematocrit (RBCHIGH) formed thrombi at a faster rate and had a shortened vessel occlusion time. Thrombi in control and RBCHIGH mice did not differ in size or fibrin content, and there was no difference in levels of circulating thrombin-antithrombin complexes. In vitro, increasing the hematocrit increased thrombin generation in the absence of platelets; however, this effect was reduced in the presence of platelets. In silico, direct numerical simulations of whole blood predicted elevated hematocrit increases the frequency and duration of interactions between platelets and a thrombus. When human whole blood was perfused over collagen at arterial shear rates, elevating the hematocrit increased the rate of platelet deposition and thrombus growth. These data suggest RBCs promote arterial thrombosis by enhancing platelet accumulation at the site of vessel injury. Maintaining a normal hematocrit may reduce arterial thrombosis risk in humans.


Journal of Rheology | 2013

Nonlinear signatures in active microbead rheology of entangled polymer solutions

Jeremy Cribb; Paula A. Vasquez; P. Moore; S. Norris; S. Shah; M. G. Forest; R. Superfine

We present experimental data and numerical modeling of a nonlinear phenomenon in active magnetic microbead rheology that appears to be common to entangled polymer solutions (EPS). Dynamic experiments in a modest range of magnetic forces show (1) a short-lived high viscosity plateau, followed by (2) a bead acceleration phase with a sharp drop in apparent viscosity, and (3) a terminal steady state that we show resides on the shear-thinning slope of the steady-state flow curve from cone and plate data. This latter feature implies a new protocol to access the nonlinear steady-state flow curve for biological EPS available only in microliter-scale volumes. We use the moment-closure form of the Rolie–Poly kinetic model for EPS hydrodynamics, together with a decoupling approximation that obviates the need for a full three-dimensional (3D) flow solver, to qualitatively reproduce this dynamic experimental sequence. We thereby explain the phenomenon in terms of entangled polymer physics, and show how the nonlinear event (acceleration and termination on the shear-thinning response curve) is tunable by the interplay between molecular-scale mechanisms (relaxation via reptation and chain retraction) and magnetic force controls. The experimental conditions mimic movement of cilia tips, bacteria, and sperm in mucus barriers, implying a physiological relevance of the phenomenon and compelling further quantitative kinetic-flow 3D numerical modeling.


ieee visualization | 2005

The software interface to the 3D-force microscope

David Marshburn; Christopher Weigle; B. Wilde; Russell M. Taylor; Kalpit Desai; Jason Fisher; Jeremy Cribb; E.T. O'Brien; Richard Superfine

We have developed a real-time experiment-control and data-display system for a novel microscope, the 3D-force microscope (3DFM), which is designed for nanometer-scale and nanoNewton-force biophysical experiments. The 3DFM software suite synthesizes the several data sources from the 3DFM into a coherent view and provides control over data collection and specimen manipulation. Herein, we describe the system architecture designed to handle the several feedback loops and data flows present in the microscope and its control system. We describe the visualization techniques used in the 3DFM software suite, where used, and on which types of data. We present feedback from our scientist-users regarding the usefulness of these techniques, and we also present lessons learned from our successive implementations.


Scientific Reports | 2016

An Automated High-throughput Array Microscope for Cancer Cell Mechanics.

Jeremy Cribb; Lukas D. Osborne; Kellie N. Beicker; Matthew A Psioda; Jian Chen; E. Timothy O’Brien; Russell M. Taylor; Leandra Vicci; Joe Ping-Lin Hsiao; Chong Shao; Michael R. Falvo; Joseph G. Ibrahim; Kris C. Wood; Gerard C. Blobe; Richard Superfine

Changes in cellular mechanical properties correlate with the progression of metastatic cancer along the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Few high-throughput methodologies exist that measure cell compliance, which can be used to understand the impact of genetic alterations or to screen the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents. We have developed a novel array high-throughput microscope (AHTM) system that combines the convenience of the standard 96-well plate with the ability to image cultured cells and membrane-bound microbeads in twelve independently-focusing channels simultaneously, visiting all wells in eight steps. We use the AHTM and passive bead rheology techniques to determine the relative compliance of human pancreatic ductal epithelial (HPDE) cells, h-TERT transformed HPDE cells (HPNE), and four gain-of-function constructs related to EMT. The AHTM found HPNE, H-ras, Myr-AKT, and Bcl2 transfected cells more compliant relative to controls, consistent with parallel tests using atomic force microscopy and invasion assays, proving the AHTM capable of screening for changes in mechanical phenotype.


Journal of Rheology | 2016

Maximum likelihood estimation for single particle, passive microrheology data with drift

Martin Lysy; Paula A. Vasquez; Natesh S. Pillai; David B. Hill; Jeremy Cribb; Scott A. McKinley; M. Gregory Forest

Volume limitations and low yield thresholds of biological fluids have led to widespread use of passive microparticle rheology. The mean-squared-displacement (MSD) statistics of bead position time series (bead paths) are either applied directly to determine the creep compliance [Xu et al., Rheol. Acta 37, 387–398 (1998)] or transformed to determine dynamic storage and loss moduli [Mason and Weitz, Phys. Rev. Lett. 74, 1250–1253 (1995)]. A prevalent hurdle arises when there is a nondiffusive experimental drift in the data. Commensurate with the magnitude of drift relative to diffusive mobility, quantified by a Peclet number, the MSD statistics are distorted, and thus the path data must be “corrected” for drift. The standard approach is to estimate and subtract the drift from particle paths, and then calculate MSD statistics. We present an alternative, parametric approach using maximum likelihood estimation that simultaneously fits drift and diffusive model parameters from the path data; the MSD statistics (and consequently the compliance and dynamic moduli) then follow directly from the best-fit model. We illustrate and compare both methods on simulated path data over a range of Peclet numbers, where exact answers are known. We choose fractional Brownian motion as the numerical model, because it affords tunable, subdiffusive MSD statistics consistent with typical 30 s long, experimental observations of microbeads in several biological fluids. Finally, we apply and compare both methods on data from human bronchial epithelial cell culture mucus.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

A high throughput array microscope for the mechanical characterization of biomaterials

Jeremy Cribb; Lukas D. Osborne; Joe Ping-Lin Hsiao; Leandra Vicci; Alok Meshram; E. Tim O’Brien; Richard Chasen Spero; Russell M. Taylor; Richard Superfine

In the last decade, the emergence of high throughput screening has enabled the development of novel drug therapies and elucidated many complex cellular processes. Concurrently, the mechanobiology community has developed tools and methods to show that the dysregulation of biophysical properties and the biochemical mechanisms controlling those properties contribute significantly to many human diseases. Despite these advances, a complete understanding of the connection between biomechanics and disease will require advances in instrumentation that enable parallelized, high throughput assays capable of probing complex signaling pathways, studying biology in physiologically relevant conditions, and capturing specimen and mechanical heterogeneity. Traditional biophysical instruments are unable to meet this need. To address the challenge of large-scale, parallelized biophysical measurements, we have developed an automated array high-throughput microscope system that utilizes passive microbead diffusion to characterize mechanical properties of biomaterials. The instrument is capable of acquiring data on twelve-channels simultaneously, where each channel in the system can independently drive two-channel fluorescence imaging at up to 50 frames per second. We employ this system to measure the concentration-dependent apparent viscosity of hyaluronan, an essential polymer found in connective tissue and whose expression has been implicated in cancer progression.

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Richard Superfine

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Russell M. Taylor

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Leandra Vicci

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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E. Timothy O'Brien

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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David B. Hill

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Jason Fisher

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Lukas D. Osborne

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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B. Wilde

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Kalpit Desai

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Richard Chasen Spero

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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