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Dive into the research topics where Penelope C. Georges is active.

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Featured researches published by Penelope C. Georges.


Soft Matter | 2007

Soft biological materials and their impact on cell function

Ilya Levental; Penelope C. Georges; Paul A. Janmey

Most organs and biological tissues are soft viscoelastic materials with elastic moduli ranging from on the order of 100 Pa for the brain to 100 000 Pa for soft cartilage. Biocompatible synthetic materials already have many applications, but combining chemical compatibility with physiologically appropriate mechanical properties will increase their potential for use both as implants and as substrates for tissue engineering. Understanding and controlling mechanical properties, specifically softness, is important for appropriate physiological function in numerous contexts. The mechanical properties of the substrate on which, or within which, cells are placed can have as large an impact as chemical stimuli on cell morphology, differentiation, motility, and commitment to live or die.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2011

Hepatic stellate cells require a stiff environment for myofibroblastic differentiation

Abby L. Olsen; Steven A. Bloomer; Erick P. Chan; Marianna D. A. Gaça; Penelope C. Georges; Bridget K. Sackey; Masayuki Uemura; Paul A. Janmey; Rebecca G. Wells

The myofibroblastic differentiation of hepatic stellate cells (HSC) is a critical event in liver fibrosis and is part of the final common pathway to cirrhosis in chronic liver disease from all causes. The molecular mechanisms driving HSC differentiation are not fully understood. Because macroscopic tissue stiffening is a feature of fibrotic disease, we hypothesized that mechanical properties of the underlying matrix are a principal determinant of HSC activation. Primary rat HSC were cultured on inert polyacrylamide supports of variable but precisely defined shear modulus (stiffness) coated with different extracellular matrix proteins or poly-L-lysine. HSC differentiation was determined by cell morphology, immunofluorescence staining, and gene expression. HSC became progressively myofibroblastic as substrate stiffness increased on all coating matrices, including Matrigel. The degree rather than speed of HSC activation correlated with substrate stiffness, with cells cultured on supports of intermediate stiffness adopting stable intermediate phenotypes. Quiescent cells on soft supports were able to undergo myofibroblastic differentiation with exposure to stiff supports. Stiffness-dependent differentiation required adhesion to matrix proteins and the generation of mechanical tension. Transforming growth factor-β treatment enhanced differentiation on stiff supports, but was not required. HSC differentiate to myofibroblasts in vitro primarily as a function of the physical rather than the chemical properties of the substrate. HSC require a mechanically stiff substrate, with adhesion to matrix proteins and the generation of mechanical tension, to differentiate. These findings suggest that alterations in liver stiffness are a key factor driving the progression of fibrosis.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2007

Polyacrylamide hydrogels for cell mechanics: steps toward optimization and alternative uses.

Casey Kandow; Penelope C. Georges; Paul A. Janmey; Karen A. Beningo

Since their first introduction, polyacrylamide hydrogels have proven to be very useful for studies of mechanical interactions at the cell-substrate interface. In this chapter, we briefly review the basic concepts of this method and provide a series of modifications that have evolved since its inception. In addition, we have described several alternative uses of polyacrylamide hydrogels that have emerged for the study of cellular mechanics. Our intention is to provide users of this gel system with a number of improved and tested options as this method advances toward optimization.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2007

Basic rheology for biologists.

Paul A. Janmey; Penelope C. Georges; Søren Hvidt

Many cellular processes lead to changes in elastic and viscous properties of cells. Rheology is the science that deals with deformation and flow of materials. Fundamental rheologic concepts are explained, and some of the main techniques are discussed. Nonperturbing oscillatory techniques are especially useful for monitoring structure formation including gelation, whereas other techniques such as steady shear flow and creep are useful for determining flow properties. Sample preparation is often a major obstacle, and advantages of different deformation geometries are discussed. Simple biological samples such as purified biopolymers can be investigated with a range of rheologic techniques, and factors affecting gelation of, for example, blood or cytoskeletal proteins can be studied in detail. More complex biological systems such as intact tissues can often only be studied with more qualitative techniques and results. With proper choice of experimental setup, rheologic techniques can give valuable information about cellular systems and dynamics on a timescale that is closely related to biological functions.


New Journal of Physics | 2014

Compression stiffening of brain and its effect on mechanosensing by glioma cells

Katarzyna Pogoda; LiKang Chin; Penelope C. Georges; Fitzroy J. Byfield; Robert Bucki; Richard Kim; Michael J. Weaver; Rebecca G. Wells; Cezary Marcinkiewicz; Paul A. Janmey

Many cell types, including neurons, astrocytes and other cells of the central nervous system respond to changes in extracellular matrix or substrate viscoelasticity, and increased tissue stiffness is a hallmark of several disease states including fibrosis and some types of cancers. Whether the malignant tissue in brain, an organ that lacks the protein-based filamentous extracellular matrix of other organs, exhibits the same macroscopic stiffening characteristic of breast, colon, pancreatic, and other tumors is not known. In this study we show that glioma cells like normal astrocytes, respond strongly in vitro to substrate stiffness in the range of 100 to 2000 Pa, but that macroscopic (mm to cm) tissue samples isolated from human glioma tumors have elastic moduli on the order of 200 Pa that are indistinguishable from those of normal brain. However, both normal brain and glioma tissues increase their shear elastic moduli under modest uniaxial compression, and glioma tissue stiffens more strongly under compression than does normal brain. These findings suggest that local tissue stiffness has the potential to alter glial cell function, and that stiffness changes in brain tumors might arise not from increased deposition or crosslinking of collagen-rich extracellular matrix but from pressure gradients that form within the tumors in vivo.


Biophysical Reviews and Letters | 2006

EFFECT OF SUBSTRATE STIFFNESS ON THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF CELLS

Penelope C. Georges; Ilya Levental; Wilfredo De JESúS Rojas; R. Tyler Miller; Paul A. Janmey

Most biological tissues are soft viscoelastic materials with elastic moduli ranging from approximately 100 to 100,000 Pa. Recent studies have examined the effect of substrate rigidity on cell structure and function, and many, but not all cell types exhibit a strong response to substrate stiffness. Some blood cells such as platelets and neutrophils have indistinguishable structures on hard and soft materials as long as they are sufficiently adhesive, whereas many cell types, including fibroblasts and endothelial cells spread much more strongly on rigid compared to soft substrates. A few cell types such as neurons appear to extend better on very soft materials. The different response of astrocytes and neurons to the stiffness of their substrate results in preferential growth of neurons on soft gels and astrocytes on hard gels, and suggests that preventing rigidification of damaged central nervous system tissue after injury may have utility in wound healing. How cells sense substrate stiffness is unknown. One candidate protein, filamin A, which responds to externally derived stresses, was tested in melanoma cells. Cells devoid of filamin A retain the ability to sense substrate stiffness, suggesting that other proteins are required for stiffness sensing.


Cytoskeleton | 2005

Effects of Substrate Stiffness on Cell Morphology, Cytoskeletal Structure, and Adhesion

Tony Yeung; Penelope C. Georges; Lisa A. Flanagan; Beatrice Marg; Miguelina Ortiz; Makoto Funaki; Nastaran Zahir; Wenyu Ming; Valerie M. Weaver; Paul A. Janmey


Biophysical Journal | 2007

Fibroblast Adaptation and Stiffness Matching to Soft Elastic Substrates

Jérôme Solon; Ilya Levental; Kheya Sengupta; Penelope C. Georges; Paul A. Janmey


Biophysical Journal | 2006

Matrices with compliance comparable to that of brain tissue select neuronal over glial growth in mixed cortical cultures

Penelope C. Georges; William J. Miller; David F. Meaney; Evelyn S. Sawyer; Paul A. Janmey


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2005

Cell type-specific response to growth on soft materials

Penelope C. Georges; Paul A. Janmey

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Paul A. Janmey

University of Pennsylvania

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Rebecca G. Wells

University of Pennsylvania

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Ilya Levental

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Jia-Ji Hui

University of Pennsylvania

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Masayuki Uemura

University of Pennsylvania

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Abby L. Olsen

University of Pennsylvania

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Bridget K. Sackey

University of Pennsylvania

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