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Dive into the research topics where Justin D. Mih is active.

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Featured researches published by Justin D. Mih.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Feedback amplification of fibrosis through matrix stiffening and COX-2 suppression

Fei Liu; Justin D. Mih; Barry S. Shea; Alvin T. Kho; Asma S. Sharif; Andrew M. Tager; Daniel J. Tschumperlin

In response to tissue stiffening, fibroblasts increase production of extracellular matrix while decreasing production of matrix-degrading enzymes and the fibrosis inhibitor prostaglandin E2.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Matrix Rigidity Regulates Cancer Cell Growth and Cellular Phenotype

Robert W. Tilghman; Catharine R. Cowan; Justin D. Mih; Yulia Koryakina; Daniel Gioeli; Jill K. Slack-Davis; Brett R. Blackman; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; J. Thomas Parsons

Background The mechanical properties of the extracellular matrix have an important role in cell growth and differentiation. However, it is unclear as to what extent cancer cells respond to changes in the mechanical properties (rigidity/stiffness) of the microenvironment and how this response varies among cancer cell lines. Methodology/Principal Findings In this study we used a recently developed 96-well plate system that arrays extracellular matrix-conjugated polyacrylamide gels that increase in stiffness by at least 50-fold across the plate. This plate was used to determine how changes in the rigidity of the extracellular matrix modulate the biological properties of tumor cells. The cell lines tested fall into one of two categories based on their proliferation on substrates of differing stiffness: “rigidity dependent” (those which show an increase in cell growth as extracellular rigidity is increased), and “rigidity independent” (those which grow equally on both soft and stiff substrates). Cells which grew poorly on soft gels also showed decreased spreading and migration under these conditions. More importantly, seeding the cell lines into the lungs of nude mice revealed that the ability of cells to grow on soft gels in vitro correlated with their ability to grow in a soft tissue environment in vivo. The lung carcinoma line A549 responded to culture on soft gels by expressing the differentiated epithelial marker E-cadherin and decreasing the expression of the mesenchymal transcription factor Slug. Conclusions/Significance These observations suggest that the mechanical properties of the matrix environment play a significant role in regulating the proliferation and the morphological properties of cancer cells. Further, the multiwell format of the soft-plate assay is a useful and effective adjunct to established 3-dimensional cell culture models.


Journal of Cell Science | 2012

Matrix stiffness reverses the effect of actomyosin tension on cell proliferation

Justin D. Mih; Aleksandar Marinkovic; Fei Liu; Asma S. Sharif; Daniel J. Tschumperlin

Summary The stiffness of the extracellular matrix exerts powerful effects on cell proliferation and differentiation, but the mechanisms transducing matrix stiffness into cellular fate decisions remain poorly understood. Two widely reported responses to matrix stiffening are increases in actomyosin contractility and cell proliferation. To delineate their relationship, we modulated cytoskeletal tension in cells grown across a physiological range of matrix stiffnesses. On both synthetic and naturally derived soft matrices, and across a panel of cell types, we observed a striking reversal of the effect of inhibiting actomyosin contractility, switching from the attenuation of proliferation on rigid substrates to the robust promotion of proliferation on soft matrices. Inhibiting contractility on soft matrices decoupled proliferation from cytoskeletal tension and focal adhesion organization, but not from cell spread area. Our results demonstrate that matrix stiffness and actomyosin contractility converge on cell spreading in an unexpected fashion to control a key aspect of cell fate.


PLOS ONE | 2011

A multiwell platform for studying stiffness-dependent cell biology.

Justin D. Mih; Asma S. Sharif; Fei Liu; Aleksandar Marinkovic; Matthew M. Symer; Daniel J. Tschumperlin

Adherent cells are typically cultured on rigid substrates that are orders of magnitude stiffer than their tissue of origin. Here, we describe a method to rapidly fabricate 96 and 384 well platforms for routine screening of cells in tissue-relevant stiffness contexts. Briefly, polyacrylamide (PA) hydrogels are cast in glass-bottom plates, functionalized with collagen, and sterilized for cell culture. The Youngs modulus of each substrate can be specified from 0.3 to 55 kPa, with collagen surface density held constant over the stiffness range. Using automated fluorescence microscopy, we captured the morphological variations of 7 cell types cultured across a physiological range of stiffness within a 384 well plate. We performed assays of cell number, proliferation, and apoptosis in 96 wells and resolved distinct profiles of cell growth as a function of stiffness among primary and immortalized cell lines. We found that the stiffness-dependent growth of normal human lung fibroblasts is largely invariant with collagen density, and that differences in their accumulation are amplified by increasing serum concentration. Further, we performed a screen of 18 bioactive small molecules and identified compounds with enhanced or reduced effects on soft versus rigid substrates, including blebbistatin, which abolished the suppression of lung fibroblast growth at 1 kPa. The ability to deploy PA gels in multiwell plates for high throughput analysis of cells in tissue-relevant environments opens new opportunities for the discovery of cellular responses that operate in specific stiffness regimes.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Cell Elasticity Determines Macrophage Function

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-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2012

Improved throughput traction microscopy reveals pivotal role for matrix stiffness in fibroblast contractility and TGF-β responsiveness

Aleksandar Marinkovic; Justin D. Mih; Jin-Ah Park; Fei Liu; Daniel J. Tschumperlin

Lung fibroblast functions such as matrix remodeling and activation of latent transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) are associated with expression of the myofibroblast phenotype and are directly linked to fibroblast capacity to generate force and deform the extracellular matrix. However, the study of fibroblast force-generating capacities through methods such as traction force microscopy is hindered by low throughput and time-consuming procedures. In this study, we improved at the detail level methods for higher-throughput traction measurements on polyacrylamide hydrogels using gel-surface-bound fluorescent beads to permit autofocusing and automated displacement mapping, and transduction of fibroblasts with a fluorescent label to streamline cell boundary identification. Together these advances substantially improve the throughput of traction microscopy and allow us to efficiently compute the forces exerted by lung fibroblasts on substrates spanning the stiffness range present in normal and fibrotic lung tissue. Our results reveal that lung fibroblasts dramatically alter the forces they transmit to the extracellular matrix as its stiffness changes, with very low forces generated on matrices as compliant as normal lung tissue. Moreover, exogenous TGF-β1 selectively accentuates tractions on stiff matrices, mimicking fibrotic lung, but not on physiological stiffness matrices, despite equivalent changes in Smad2/3 activation. Taken together, these results demonstrate a pivotal role for matrix mechanical properties in regulating baseline and TGF-β1-stimulated contraction of lung fibroblasts and suggest that stiff fibrotic lung tissue may promote myofibroblast activation through contractility-driven events, whereas normal lung tissue compliance may protect against such feedback amplification of fibroblast activation.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2013

Matrix Stiffness Corresponding to Strictured Bowel Induces a Fibrogenic Response in Human Colonic Fibroblasts

Laura A. Johnson; Eva S. Rodansky; Kay Sauder; Jeffrey C. Horowitz; Justin D. Mih; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Peter D. Higgins

Background:Crohns disease is characterized by repeated cycles of inflammation and mucosal healing which ultimately progress to intestinal fibrosis. This inexorable progression toward fibrosis suggests that fibrosis becomes inflammation-independent and auto-propagative. We hypothesized that matrix stiffness regulates this auto-propagation of intestinal fibrosis. Methods:The stiffness of fresh ex vivo samples from normal human small intestine, Crohns disease strictures, and the unaffected margin were measured with a microelastometer. Normal human colonic fibroblasts were cultured on physiologically normal or pathologically stiff matrices corresponding to the physiological stiffness of normal or fibrotic bowel. Cellular response was assayed for changes in cell morphology, &agr;-smooth muscle actin staining, and gene expression. Results:Microelastometer measurements revealed a significant increase in colonic tissue stiffness between normal human colon and Crohn’s strictures and between the stricture and adjacent tissue margin. In Ccd-18co cells grown on stiff matrices corresponding to Crohn’s strictures, cellular proliferation increased. Pathologic stiffness induced a marked change in cell morphology and increased &agr;-smooth muscle actin protein expression. Growth on a stiff matrix induced fibrogenic gene expression, decreased matrix metalloproteinase, and proinflammatory gene expression and was associated with nuclear localization of the transcriptional cofactor MRTF-A. Conclusions:Matrix stiffness, representative of the pathologic stiffness of Crohn’s strictures, activates human colonic fibroblasts to a fibrogenic phenotype. Matrix stiffness affects multiple pathways, suggesting that the mechanical properties of the cellular environment are critical to fibroblast function and may contribute to auto-propagation of intestinal fibrosis in the absence of inflammation, thereby contributing to the intractable intestinal fibrosis characteristic of Crohn’s disease.


Archive | 2008

Compliant Surface Multi-Well Culture Plate

Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Fei Liu; Justin D. Mih


american thoracic society international conference | 2011

Increased Extracellular Matrix Stiffness Enhances Airway Smooth Muscle Contractile Phenotype And Contractile Function

Adrian R. West; Sarah Connolly; Justin D. Mih; Kristen L. Billiar; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Geoffry N. Maksym


american thoracic society international conference | 2011

Transitions In Matrix Stiffness Uncouple Lung Fibroblast Proliferative And Morphological Responses From Cytoskeletal Tension

Aleksandar Marinkovic; Justin D. Mih; Fei Liu; Daniel J. Tschumperlin

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Alvin T. Kho

Boston Children's Hospital

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Kay Sauder

University of Michigan

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