Glial Tissue Mechanics and Mechanosensing by Glial Cells

Front Cell Neurosci. 2018 Feb 21:12:25. doi: 10.3389/fncel.2018.00025. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Understanding the mechanical behavior of human brain is critical to interpret the role of physical stimuli in both normal and pathological processes that occur in CNS tissue, such as development, inflammation, neurodegeneration, aging, and most common brain tumors. Despite clear evidence that mechanical cues influence both normal and transformed brain tissue activity as well as normal and transformed brain cell behavior, little is known about the links between mechanical signals and their biochemical and medical consequences. A multi-level approach from whole organ rheology to single cell mechanics is needed to understand the physical aspects of human brain function and its pathologies. This review summarizes the latest achievements in the field.

Keywords: brain tissue rheology; brain-mimicking ECMs; mechanical properties of brain tumors; mechanosensing; normal and transformed glial cells.

Publication types

  • Review