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Dive into the research topics where Marjan Shayegan is active.

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Featured researches published by Marjan Shayegan.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Microrheological Characterization of Collagen Systems: From Molecular Solutions to Fibrillar Gels

Marjan Shayegan; Nancy R. Forde

Collagen is the most abundant protein in the extracellular matrix (ECM), where its structural organization conveys mechanical information to cells. Using optical-tweezers-based microrheology, we investigated mechanical properties both of collagen molecules at a range of concentrations in acidic solution where fibrils cannot form and of gels of collagen fibrils formed at neutral pH, as well as the development of microscale mechanical heterogeneity during the self-assembly process. The frequency scaling of the complex shear modulus even at frequencies of ∼10 kHz was not able to resolve the flexibility of collagen molecules in acidic solution. In these solutions, molecular interactions cause significant transient elasticity, as we observed for 5 mg/ml solutions at frequencies above ∼200 Hz. We found the viscoelasticity of solutions of collagen molecules to be spatially homogeneous, in sharp contrast to the heterogeneity of self-assembled fibrillar collagen systems, whose elasticity varied by more than an order of magnitude and in power-law behavior at different locations within the sample. By probing changes in the complex shear modulus over 100-minute timescales as collagen self-assembled into fibrils, we conclude that microscale heterogeneity appears during early phases of fibrillar growth and continues to develop further during this growth phase. Experiments in which growing fibrils dislodge microspheres from an optical trap suggest that fibril growth is a force-generating process. These data contribute to understanding how heterogeneities develop during self-assembly, which in turn can help synthesis of new materials for cellular engineering.


Optics Express | 2011

Positional stability of holographic optical traps

Arnau Farré; Marjan Shayegan; Carol López-Quesada; Gerhard A. Blab; Mario Montes-Usategui; Nancy R. Forde; Estela Martín-Badosa

The potential of digital holography for complex manipulation of micron-sized particles with optical tweezers has been clearly demonstrated. By contrast, its use in quantitative experiments has been rather limited, partly due to fluctuations introduced by the spatial light modulator (SLM) that displays the kinoforms. This is an important issue when high temporal or spatial stability is a concern. We have investigated the performance of both an analog-addressed and a digitally-addressed SLM, measuring the phase fluctuations of the modulated beam and evaluating the resulting positional stability of a holographic trap. We show that, despite imparting a more unstable modulation to the wavefront, our digitally-addressed SLM generates optical traps in the sample plane stable enough for most applications. We further show that traps produced by the analog-addressed SLM exhibit a superior pointing stability, better than 1 nm, which is comparable to that of non-holographic tweezers. These results suggest a means to implement precision force measurement experiments with holographic optical tweezers (HOTs).


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Probing multiscale mechanics of collagen with optical tweezers

Marjan Shayegan; Naghmeh Rezaei; Norman H. Lam; Tuba Altindal; Andrew Wieczorek; Nancy R. Forde

How the molecular structure of the structural, extracellular matrix protein collagen correlates with its mechanical properties at different hierarchical structural levels is not known. We demonstrate the utility of optical tweezers to probe collagen’s mechanical response throughout its assembly hierarchy, from single molecule force-extension measurements through microrheology measurements on solutions of collagen molecules, collagen fibrillar gels and gelatin. These experiments enable the determination of collagen’s flexibility, mechanics, and timescales and strengths of interaction at different levels of hierarchy, information critical to developing models of how collagen’s physiological function and stability are influenced by its chemical composition. By investigating how the viscoelastic properties of collagen are affected by the presence of telopeptides, protein domains that strongly influence fibril formation, we demonstrate that these play a role in conferring transient elasticity to collagen solutions.


MRS Proceedings | 2012

Probing the Viscoelasticity of Collagen Solutions via Optical-Tweezers-Based Microrheology

Marjan Shayegan; Nancy R. Forde


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Probing the Viscoelasticity of Collagen Solutions with Optical-Tweezers-Based Microrheology

Marjan Shayegan; Nancy R. Forde


Biophysical Journal | 2016

Intact Telopeptides Enhance Interactions between Collagens

Marjan Shayegan; Tuba Altindal; Evan Kiefl; Nancy R. Forde


Biophysical Journal | 2014

Investigating the Mechanism of Collagen Self-Assembly with Microrheology

Marjan Shayegan; Tuba Altindal; Nancy R. Forde


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Mesoscale properties of phase-separated polymers under confinement and their size scaling

Marjan Shayegan; Radin Tahvildari; Kimberly Metera; Stephen W. Michnick; Sabrina Leslie


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Confinement-induced Molecular Templating and Controlled Ligation

Daniel Berard; Marjan Shayegan; François Michaud; Gil Henkin; Shane Scott; Jason S. Leith; Sabrina Leslie


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016

Convex Lens-induced Confinement to Visualize Biopolymers and Interaction Parameters

Frank Stabile; Daniel Berard; Gil Henkin; Marjan Shayegan; François Michaud; Sabrina Leslie

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Evan Kiefl

Simon Fraser University

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