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      Noncontact measurement of the local mechanical properties of living cells using pressure applied via a pipette.

      Biophysical Journal
      Animals, Biomechanical Phenomena, Calibration, Cell Survival, Cells, cytology, Epithelial Cells, Erythrocytes, Models, Biological, Myocytes, Cardiac, Neurons, Pressure, Reproducibility of Results

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          Abstract

          Mechanosensitivity in living biological tissue is a study area of increasing importance, but investigative tools are often inadequate. We have developed a noncontact nanoscale method to apply quantified positive and negative force at defined positions to the soft responsive surface of living cells. The method uses applied hydrostatic pressure (0.1-150 kPa) through a pipette, while the pipette-sample separation is kept constant above the cell surface using ion conductance based distance feedback. This prevents any surface contact, or contamination of the pipette, allowing repeated measurements. We show that we can probe the local mechanical properties of living cells using increasing pressure, and hence measure the nanomechanical properties of the cell membrane and the underlying cytoskeleton in a variety of cells (erythrocytes, epithelium, cardiomyocytes and neurons). Because the cell surface can first be imaged without pressure, it is possible to relate the mechanical properties to the local cell topography. This method is well suited to probe the nanomechanical properties and mechanosensitivity of living cells.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          18515369
          2527257
          10.1529/biophysj.108.129551

          Chemistry
          Animals,Biomechanical Phenomena,Calibration,Cell Survival,Cells,cytology,Epithelial Cells,Erythrocytes,Models, Biological,Myocytes, Cardiac,Neurons,Pressure,Reproducibility of Results

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