4.5 Article

A novel system for dynamic stretching of cell cultures reveals the mechanobiology for delivering better negative pressure wound therapy

Journal

BIOMECHANICS AND MODELING IN MECHANOBIOLOGY
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages 193-204

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10237-020-01377-6

Keywords

Chronic and acute wound healing; Scratch wound assay; Cell biomechanics; Surgical wounds; Tissue repair

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [1266/16]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant [811965]

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Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is considered a mainstream procedure for treating serious wounds, enhancing cell proliferation and migration for healing. Researchers developed a dynamic stretching device (DSD) to apply controlled deformations to fibroblast wound assays, and found that a specific stretching regime significantly affected cell migration rate and wound closure time. Other simulated NPWT protocols did not show superiority compared to controls.
Serious wounds, both chronic and acute (e.g., surgical), are among the most common, expensive and difficult-to-treat health problems. Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is considered a mainstream procedure for treating both wound types. Soft tissue deformation stimuli are the crux of NPWT, enhancing cell proliferation and migration from peri-wound tissues which contributes to healing. We developed a dynamic stretching device (DSD) contained in a miniature incubator for applying controlled deformations to fibroblast wound assays. Prior to the stretching experiments, fibroblasts were seeded in 6-well culture plates with elastic substrata and let to reach confluency. Squashing damage was then induced at the culture centers, and the DSD was activated to deliver stretching regimes that represented common clinical NPWT protocols at two peak strain levels, 0.5% and 3%. Analyses of the normalized maximal migration rate (MMR) data for the collective cell movement revealed that for the 3% strain level, the normalized MMR of cultures subjected to a 0.1 Hz stretch frequency regime was similar to 1.4 times and statistically significantly greater (p < 0.05) than that of the cultures subjected to no-stretch (control) or to static stretch (2nd control). Correspondingly, analysis of the time to gap closure data indicated that the closure time of the wound assays subjected to the 0.1 Hz regime was similar to 30% shorter than that of the cultures subjected to the control regimes (p < 0.05). Other simulated NPWT protocols did not emerge as superior to the controls. The present method and system are a powerful platform for further revealing the mechanobiology of NPWT and for improving this technology.

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