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Cell visco-elasticity measured with AFM and optical trapping at sub-micrometer deformations

TLDR
Analysis of the response of single 3T3 fibroblasts that were indented with a micrometer-sized bead attached to an AFM cantilever at forces from 30–600 pN found that at such small deformations, the elastic modulus of 100 Pa is largely determined by the presence of the actin cortex.
Abstract
The measurement of the elastic properties of cells is widely used as an indicator for cellular changes during differentiation, upon drug treatment, or resulting from the interaction with the supporting matrix. Elasticity is routinely quantified by indenting the cell with a probe of an AFM while applying nano-Newton forces. Because the resulting deformations are in the micrometer range, the measurements will be affected by the finite thickness of the cell, viscous effects and even cell damage induced by the experiment itself. Here, we have analyzed the response of single 3T3 fibroblasts that were indented with a micrometer-sized bead attached to an AFM cantilever at forces from 30-600 pN, resulting in indentations ranging from 0.2 to 1.2 micrometer. To investigate the cellular response at lower forces up to 10 pN, we developed an optical trap to indent the cell in vertical direction, normal to the plane of the coverslip. Deformations of up to two hundred nanometers achieved at forces of up to 30 pN showed a reversible, thus truly elastic response that was independent on the rate of deformation. We found that at such small deformations, the elastic modulus of 100 Pa is largely determined by the presence of the actin cortex. At higher indentations, viscous effects led to an increase of the apparent elastic modulus. This viscous contribution that followed a weak power law, increased at larger cell indentations. Both AFM and optical trapping indentation experiments give consistent results for the cell elasticity. Optical trapping has the benefit of a lower force noise, which allows a more accurate determination of the absolute indentation. The combination of both techniques allows the investigation of single cells at small and large indentations and enables the separation of their viscous and elastic components.

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Investigating cell mechanics with atomic force microscopy.

TL;DR: This review generally describes the mechanotransductive process through discussion of well-known mechanosensors, and focuses on discussion of recent examples where AFM is used to specifically probe the elastic and inelastic responses of single cells undergoing deformation.
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Keratins significantly contribute to cell stiffness and impact invasive behavior

TL;DR: It is shown that keratin-free cells from mice skin lacking all keratins on genome engineering have about 60% higher cell deformability even for small deformations in contrast to a smaller effect generated by actin depolymerization.
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The Mechanobiology of Aging

TL;DR: Recent work critically review recent work highlighting some of the primary biophysical changes occurring in cells and tissues that accompany the aging process.
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Measuring nanoscale viscoelastic parameters of cells directly from AFM force-displacement curves.

TL;DR: A new method to extract nanoscale viscoelastic properties of soft samples like living cells and hydrogels directly from conventional AFM F-Z experiments, thereby creating a common platform for the analysis of cell elastic and viscoELastic properties with arbitrary linear constitutive relations is proposed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The relation between load and penetration in the axisymmetric Boussinesq problem for a punch of arbitrary profile

TL;DR: In this article, a solution of the axisymmetric Boussinesq problem is derived from which are deduced simple formulae for the depth of penetration of the tip of a punch of arbitrary profile and for the total load which must be applied to the punch to achieve this penetration.
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TL;DR: It is found that optical deformability is sensitive enough to monitor the subtle changes during the progression of mouse fibroblasts and human breast epithelial cells from normal to cancerous and even metastatic state, and suggests using optical deformable as an inherent cell marker for basic cell biological investigation and diagnosis of disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scaling the microrheology of living cells.

TL;DR: A scaling law is reported that governs both the elastic and frictional properties of a wide variety of living cell types, over a wide range of time scales and under a variety of biological interventions, and implies that cytoskeletal proteins may regulate cell mechanical properties mainly by modulating the effective noise temperature of the matrix.
Journal ArticleDOI

The optical stretcher: a novel laser tool to micromanipulate cells.

TL;DR: The magnitude of the deforming forces in the optical stretcher bridges the gap between optical tweezers and atomic force microscopy for the study of biologic materials.
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