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Driving Cells with Light‐Controlled Topographies

Alberto PuliafitoCandiolo Cancer Institute FPO‐IRCCS Candiolo Turin 10060 ItalySerena RicciardiDepartment of Applied Science and Technology Polytechnic University of Turin C.so Duca degli Abruzzi 24 Turin 10129 ItalyFederica PiraniDepartment of Applied Science and Technology Polytechnic University of Turin C.so Duca degli Abruzzi 24 Turin 10129 ItalyViktorie ČermochováDepartment of Applied Science and Technology Polytechnic University of Turin C.so Duca degli Abruzzi 24 Turin 10129 ItalyLuca BoarinoQuantum Research Labs & Nanofacility Piemonte Nanoscience & Materials Division Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica Strada delle Cacce 91 Turin 10135 ItalyNatascia De LeoQuantum Research Labs & Nanofacility Piemonte Nanoscience & Materials Division Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica Strada delle Cacce 91 Turin 10135 ItalyLuca PrimoCandiolo Cancer Institute FPO‐IRCCS Candiolo Turin 10060 ItalyEmiliano DescroviDepartment of Applied Science and Technology Polytechnic University of Turin C.so Duca degli Abruzzi 24 Turin 10129 Italy
Advanced Sciencejournal2019en
ABI

Abstract

Cell-substrate interactions can modulate cellular behaviors in a variety of biological contexts, including development and disease. Light-responsive materials have been recently proposed to engineer active substrates with programmable topographies directing cell adhesion, migration, and differentiation. However, current approaches are affected by either fabrication complexity, limitations in the extent of mechanical stimuli, lack of full spatio-temporal control, or ease of use. Here, a platform exploiting light to plastically deform micropatterned polymeric substrates is presented. Topographic changes with remarkable relief depths in the micron range are induced in parallel, by illuminating the sample at once, without using raster scanners. In few tens of seconds, complex topographies are instructed on demand, with arbitrary spatial distributions over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales. Proof-of-concept data on breast cancer cells and normal kidney epithelial cells are presented. Both cell types adhere and proliferate on substrates without appreciable cell damage upon light-induced substrate deformations. User-provided mechanical stimulation aligns and guides cancer cells along the local deformation direction and constrains epithelial colony growth by biasing cell division orientation. This approach is easy to implement on general-purpose optical microscopy systems and suitable for use in cell biology in a wide variety of applications.

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