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Cell mechanics and cellular engineering may be defined as the
application of principles and methods of engineering and life
sciences toward fundamental understanding of structure-function
relationships in normal and pathological cells and the development
of biological substitutes to restore cellular functions. This
definition is derived from one developed for tissue engineering at
a 1988 NSF workshop. The reader of this volume will see the
definition being applied and stretched to study cell and tissue
structure-function relationships. The best way to define a field is
really to let the investigators describe their areas of study.
Perhaps cell mechanics could be compartmentalized by remembering
how some of the earliest thinkers wrote about the effects of
mechanics on growth. As early as 1638, Galileo hypothesized that
gravity and of living mechanical forces place limits on the growth
and architecture organisms. It seems only fitting that Robert
Hooke, who gave us Hooke's law of elasticity, also gave us the word
"cell" in his 1665 text, Micrographid, to designate these
elementary entities of life. Julius Wolffs 1899 treatise on the
function and form of the trabecular architecture provided an
incisive example of the relationship between the structure of the
body and the mechanical load it bears. In 1917, D' Arcy Thompson's
On Growth and Form revolutionized the analysis of biological
processes by introducing cogent physical explanations of the
relationships between the structure and function of cells and
organisms.
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