The mechanical properties of cells impact on their architecture, their migration, intracellular trafficking, and many other cellular functions and have been shown to be modified during cancer progression. We have developed an approach to map the intracellular mechanical properties of living cells by combining micropatterning and optical tweezers-based active microrheology. We optically trap micrometersized beads internalized in cells plated on crossbow-shaped adhesive micropatterns and track their displacement following a step displacement of the cell. The local intracellular complex shear modulus is measured from the relaxation of the bead position assuming that the intracellular microenvironment of the bead obeys power-law rheology. We also analyze the data with a standard viscoelastic model and compare with the power-law approach. We show that the shear modulus decreases from the cell center to the periphery and from the cell rear to the front along the polarity axis of the micropattern. We use a variety of inhibitors to quantify the spatial contribution of the cytoskeleton, intracellular membranes, and ATPdependent active forces to intracellular mechanics and apply our technique to differentiate normal and cancer cells.
CITATION STYLE
Mandal, K., Asnacios, A., Goud, B., & Manneville, J. B. (2016). Mapping intracellular mechanics on micropatterned substrates. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(46), E7159–E7168. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1605112113
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