Skip to main content
UMass Collegiate M The University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Search UMass.edu
College of Natural Sciences College of Natural Sciences

Main navigation

  • Academics
    Undergraduate programsGraduate programsCertificate programsFlexible and online learningAll academic programsCourses
    See all departments
    AdvisingStudent resourcesScholarshipsDegree requirementsCareer Center
  • Research
    Research centers & institutesUndergraduate researchGreenhousesIndustry partnershipsResearch supportCNS Bridge and Seed Funding (BSF) programScientific glassblowing laboratory
  • Campus & Outreach
    Diversity, Equity & InclusionOffice of Student Success & DiversityEureka!Community ConnectionsGivingCenter for Agriculture, Food, and the EnvironmentUMass Extension
  • About
    NewsStoriesEventsPeopleMeet the leadershipBuildings and facilitiesContact
    Information for faculty & staffInformation for alumni

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. News

PSE Team First to Detect Silent 'Scream' of Epithelial Cells

March 17, 2025 Research

Content

Respiratory epithelial tissue
Respiratory epithelial tissue

It has long been thought that only nerve and heart cells use electric impulses to communicate, while epithelial cells—which compose the linings of our skin, organs, and body cavities—are mute, serving mostly as protective barriers that can absorb and secrete various substances. But two researchers from the College of Natural Sciences's Department of Polymer Science and Engineering (PSE) have upended the status quo by showing that epithelial cells do indeed “talk” to each other, albeit with slow electrical signals. Led by Steve Granick, the Robert K. Barrett Professor of Polymer Science and Engineering, and postdoctoral fellow Sun-Min Yu, the discovery, published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could enable new applications for everything from wearable bioelectric sensors to wound healing.

Image
An epithelial-cell-coated chip
Granick and Yu used an epithelial-cell-coated chip with 60 precisely placed electrodes that could detect minute electrical shifts.

“Epithelial cells do things that no one has ever thought to look for,” says Granick. “When injured, they ‘scream’ to their neighbors, slowly, persistently, and over surprising distances. It’s like a nerve’s impulse, but 1,000 times slower.” His team’s curiosity-driven approach, blending polymer science and biology, unveiled this hidden cellular signaling.

Granick and Yu used an epithelial-cell-coated chip with 60 precisely placed electrodes to eavesdrop. Yu, a cell-culture expert, grew a single layer of human epithelial cells on the chip, which detected minute electric shifts. 

Using a precise laser to produce “sting” patterns of individual cells, they watched as signals rippled outward. “We tracked how cells coordinated their response,” Yu explained. “It’s a slow-motion, excited conversation.” 

Unlike the swift neurotransmitter bursts of nerve cells, epithelial cells rely on ion flows—of calcium, especially—that produce signals that are far slower than those in nerve cells, but with similar voltages. These signals can be long-lived: Granick and Yu observed cells that “talked” for over five hours across distances nearly 40 times their own length. 

Though Granick and Yu showed that calcium ions are necessary for epithelial conversation, they have yet to test what else might contribute to the conversation. And though the immediate applications of their new discovery remain to be seen, the implications are vast. 

“Wearable sensors, implantable devices, and faster wound healing could grow from this,” Granick noted. “Understanding these screams between wounded cells opens doors we didn’t know existed,” Yu added.

Learn more about this work: WBAY-TV, ScienceNews, TheScientist, Phys.org, ScienceDaily, SciTechDaily, Technology Networks, Science Alert, Tech Fixated, PhysicsWorld, and Japan Today.


This story was originally published by the UMass News Office.

Article posted in Research for Faculty , Prospective students , and Public

Related programs

  • Polymer Science and Engineering

Related departments

  • Polymer Science and Engineering

Site footer

College of Natural Sciences
  • X
  • Find us on Facebook
  • Find us on YouTube
  • Find us on LinkedIn
  • Find us on Instagram
Address

101 Stockbridge Hall
80 Campus Center Way
Amherst, MA 01003-9248
United States

Phone number
(413) 545-2766

Info for...

  • Current students
  • Faculty and staff
  • Alumni

Academics

  • Explore our programs
  • Departments

The college

  • About CNS
  • News
  • Events

Contact

  • Contact CNS
  • Directory

Global footer

  • ©2025 University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Site policies
  • Privacy
  • Non-discrimination notice
  • Accessibility
  • Terms of use