PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2025

Cartilaginous microtissues exhibit extreme resilience under compression with size-dependent mechanical properties

Androulidakis C, Svitina H, et al.

Biomaterials

KU Leuven, Stanford University

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study revealed how self-assembled cartilaginous microtissues derived from human periosteum-derived cells (hPDCs) exhibit exceptional mechanical resilience and size-dependent stiffness during large compressive deformations. Using strain-controlled tests, the authors showed that the Young’s modulus follows a power-law scaling with tissue diameter (E ∝ D^m) and increases with chondrogenic maturation. Microtissues sustained compressive strains exceeding 90 % without failure, exhibiting strain stiffening and stress relaxation with actomyosin-dependent oscillations. The findings highlight the importance of surface tension and tissue size in regulating the mechanical behavior of engineered tissues, informing the design of modular scaffold-free bone and cartilage regeneration therapies.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MicroTester

Mechanical testing was performed using a CellScale MicroTester LT (Waterloo, Canada) equipped with tungsten beams (0.40–0.55 mm diameter, 4.11 GPa stiffness) and a side camera for submicron displacement tracking. Cell aggregates and cartilaginous microtissues were compressed live in PBS at 37 °C at 2 % s⁻¹ strain rate up to 95 % strain. Force resolution ranged from 9.7 µN to 34.5 µN. The MicroTester software enabled direct estimation of interfacial surface tension and viscosity from stress–strain and relaxation data, revealing that tissue stiffness and viscosity scale inversely with size and increase with maturation.
AUTHORS

Charalampos Androulidakis, Hanna Svitina, Konstantinos Ioannidis, Alexander R. Dunn, Ioannis Papantoniou.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Biomaterials

YEAR

2025

INSTITUTIONS

KU Leuven, Stanford University

COUNTRIES

Belgium, United States

INSTRUMENT USED

MicroTester

TESTING METHODS

Compression TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingMicro-Mechanical TestingStress Relaxation TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Cartilage and Meniscus MechanicsMechanotransductionMicrotissue and Spheroid MechanicsMusculoskeletal Tissue Engineering & MechanicsOrganoid and Tissue Mimetic SystemsStem Cell Mechanobiology

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