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Dive into the research topics where Kenneth M. Pryse is active.

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Featured researches published by Kenneth M. Pryse.


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2003

Incremental mechanics of collagen gels: new experiments and a new viscoelastic model.

Kenneth M. Pryse; Ali Nekouzadeh; Guy M. Genin; Elliot L. Elson; George I. Zahalak

AbstractPaired incremental uniaxial step (i.e., relaxation) and ramp tests were conducted simultaneously on four (nominally) identical samples of type I collagen gel, over a direct strain range 0 < ɛ < 0.2. The paired step and ramp responses could not both be predicted by a simple viscoelastic constitutive relation (either linear or Fung-type), but could be predicted reasonably accurately by a general nonlinear viscoelastic relation with a strain-dependent relaxation spectrum, of the form


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2006

Cellular and Matrix Contributions to Tissue Construct Stiffness Increase with Cellular Concentration

J. Pablo Marquez; Guy M. Genin; Kenneth M. Pryse; Elliot L. Elson


PLOS ONE | 2012

Physically-Induced Cytoskeleton Remodeling of Cells in Three-Dimensional Culture

Sheng-Lin Lee; Ali Nekouzadeh; Boyd Butler; Kenneth M. Pryse; William B. McConnaughey; Adam C. Nathan; Wesley R. Legant; Pascal M. Schaefer; Robert Pless; Elliot L. Elson; Guy M. Genin

\sigma (t){} = \int {_{ - \infty}^t g(t - \tau ;\varepsilon )} [d\varepsilon (\tau )/d\tau ]d\tau .


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Fatty Acid 2-Hydroxylase Mediates Diffusional Mobility of Raft-associated Lipids, GLUT4 Level, and Lipogenesis in 3T3-L1 Adipocytes

Lin Guo; Dequan Zhou; Kenneth M. Pryse; Adewole L. Okunade; Xiong Su


Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2016

Efficient and optimized identification of generalized Maxwell viscoelastic relaxation spectra.

Behzad Babaei; Ali Davarian; Kenneth M. Pryse; Elliot L. Elson; Guy M. Genin

Based on a four-term exponential-series approximation, we measured the stiffness moduli and time constants of the relaxation function, g(t,\varepsilon ), for the four gel samples that we tested, and found that the time constants were independent of strain but the moduli increased strongly with strain. Further, we found that the time constants did not vary across the four gels, but the moduli varied by a factor of about 2 across the gels. Some additional tests show features of the response of collagen gels to cycles of application and removal of loading.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2016

Remodeling by fibroblasts alters the rate-dependent mechanical properties of collagen

Behzad Babaei; Ali Davarian; Sheng-Lin Lee; Kenneth M. Pryse; William B. McConnaughey; Elliot L. Elson; Guy M. Genin

The mechanics of bio-artificial tissue constructs result from active and passive contributions of cells and extracellular matrix (ECM). We delineated these for a fibroblast-populated matrix (FPM) consisting of chick embryo fibroblast cells in a type I collagen ECM through mechanical testing, mechanical modeling, and selective biochemical elimination of tissue components. From a series of relaxation tests, we found that contributions to overall tissue mechanics from both cells and ECM increase exponentially with the cell concentration. The force responses in these relaxation tests exhibited a logarithmic decay over the 3600 second test duration. The amplitudes of these responses were nearly linear with the amplitude of the applied stretch. The active component of cellular forces rose dramatically for FPMs containing higher cell concentrations.


Biophysical Journal | 2017

Investigation of Nanoscopic Phase Separations in Lipid Membranes Using Inverse FCS

Yanfei Jiang; Kenneth M. Pryse; Artem V. Melnykov; Guy M. Genin; Elliot L. Elson

Characterizing how cells in three-dimensional (3D) environments or natural tissues respond to biophysical stimuli is a longstanding challenge in biology and tissue engineering. We demonstrate a strategy to monitor morphological and mechanical responses of contractile fibroblasts in a 3D environment. Cells responded to stretch through specific, cell-wide mechanisms involving staged retraction and reinforcement. Retraction responses occurred for all orientations of stress fibers and cellular protrusions relative to the stretch direction, while reinforcement responses, including extension of cellular processes and stress fiber formation, occurred predominantly in the stretch direction. A previously unreported role of F-actin clumps was observed, with clumps possibly acting as F-actin reservoirs for retraction and reinforcement responses during stretch. Responses were consistent with a model of cellular sensitivity to local physical cues. These findings suggest mechanisms for global actin cytoskeleton remodeling in non-muscle cells and provide insight into cellular responses important in pathologies such as fibrosis and hypertension.


Biophysical Journal | 2015

Collective Matrix Remodeling by Isolated Cells: Unionizing Home Improvement Do-It-Yourselfers

Roger A. Rowe; Kenneth M. Pryse; Clara F. Asnes; Elliot L. Elson; Guy M. Genin

Straight chain fatty acid α-oxidation increases during differentiation of 3T3-L1 adipocytes, leading to a marked accumulation of odd chain length fatty acyl moieties. Potential roles of this pathway in adipocyte differentiation and lipogenesis are unknown. Mammalian fatty acid 2-hydroxylase (FA2H) was recently identified and suggested to catalyze the initial step of straight chain fatty acid α-oxidation. Accordingly, we examined whether FA2H modulates adipocyte differentiation and lipogenesis in mature adipocytes. FA2H level markedly increases during differentiation of 3T3-L1 adipocytes, and small interfering RNAs against FA2H inhibit the differentiation process. In mature adipocytes, depletion of FA2H inhibits basal and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and lipogenesis, which are partially rescued by the enzymatic product of FA2H, 2-hydroxy palmitic acid. Expression of fatty-acid synthase and SCD1 was decreased in FA2H-depleted cells, and levels of GLUT4 and insulin receptor proteins were reduced. 2-Hydroxy fatty acids are enriched in cellular sphingolipids, which are components of membrane rafts. Accelerated diffusional mobility of raft-associated lipids was shown to enhance degradation of GLUT4 and insulin receptor in adipocytes. Consistent with this, depletion of FA2H appeared to increase raft lipid mobility as it significantly accelerated the rates of fluorescence recovery after photobleaching measurements of lipid rafts labeled with Alexa 488-conjugated cholera toxin subunit B. Moreover, the enhanced recovery rates were partially reversed by treatment with 2-hydroxy palmitic acid. In conclusion, our findings document the novel role of FA2H in adipocyte lipogenesis possibly by modulation of raft fluidity and level of GLUT4.


bioRxiv | 2018

Atomic force microscopy of phase separation on ruptured, giant unilamellar vesicles

Yanfei Jiang; Guy M. Genin; Kenneth M. Pryse; Elliot L. Elson

Viscoelastic relaxation spectra are essential for predicting and interpreting the mechanical responses of materials and structures. For biological tissues, these spectra must usually be estimated from viscoelastic relaxation tests. Interpreting viscoelastic relaxation tests is challenging because the inverse problem is expensive computationally. We present here an efficient algorithm that enables rapid identification of viscoelastic relaxation spectra. The algorithm was tested against trial data to characterize its robustness and identify its limitations and strengths. The algorithm was then applied to identify the viscoelastic response of reconstituted collagen, revealing an extensive distribution of viscoelastic time constants.


ASME 2008 Summer Bioengineering Conference, Parts A and B | 2008

Active and Passive Responses of Myofibroblasts in Response to Mechanical Stretching in 3D Culture

Adam C. Nathan; Sheng-Lin Lee; J. Pablo Marquez; Tao Ju; Kenneth M. Pryse; Elliot L. Elson; Guy M. Genin

UNLABELLED The ways that fibroblasts remodel their environment are central to wound healing, development of musculoskeletal tissues, and progression of pathologies such as fibrosis. However, the changes that fibroblasts make to the material around them and the mechanical consequences of these changes have proven difficult to quantify, especially in realistic, viscoelastic three-dimensional culture environments, leaving a critical need for quantitative data. Here, we observed the mechanisms and quantified the mechanical effects of fibroblast remodeling in engineered tissue constructs (ETCs) comprised of reconstituted rat tail (type I) collagen and human fibroblast cells. To study the effects of remodeling on tissue mechanics, stress-relaxation tests were performed on ETCs cultured for 24, 48, and 72h. ETCs were treated with deoxycholate and tested again to assess the ECM response. Viscoelastic relaxation spectra were obtained using the generalized Maxwell model. Cells exhibited viscoelastic damping at two finite time constants over which the ECM showed little damping, approximately 0.2s and 10-30s. Different finite time constants in the range of 1-7000s were attributed to ECM relaxation. Cells remodeled the ECM to produce a relaxation time constant on the order of 7000s, and to merge relaxation finite time constants in the 0.5-2s range into a single time content in the 1s range. Results shed light on hierarchical deformation mechanisms in tissues, and on pathologies related to collagen relaxation such as diastolic dysfunction. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE As fibroblasts proliferate within and remodel a tissue, they change the tissue mechanically. Quantifying these changes is critical for understanding wound healing and the development of pathologies such as cardiac fibrosis. Here, we characterize for the first time the spectrum of viscoelastic (rate-dependent) changes arising from the remodeling of reconstituted collagen by fibroblasts. The method also provides estimates of the viscoelastic spectra of fibroblasts within a three-dimensional culture environment. Results are of particular interest because of the ways that fibroblasts alter the mechanical response of collagen at loading frequencies associated with cardiac contraction in humans.

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Elliot L. Elson

Washington University in St. Louis

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Guy M. Genin

Washington University in St. Louis

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Ali Nekouzadeh

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sheng-Lin Lee

Washington University in St. Louis

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William B. McConnaughey

Washington University in St. Louis

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Behzad Babaei

Washington University in St. Louis

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Yanfei Jiang

Washington University in St. Louis

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Ali Davarian

Washington University in St. Louis

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Artem V. Melnykov

Washington University in St. Louis

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Adam C. Nathan

Washington University in St. Louis

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