Jonas Maxine, Huang Hayden, Kamm Roger D, So Peter T C
Departments of Biological Engineering and Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Biophys J. 2008 Jul;95(2):895-909. doi: 10.1529/biophysj.107.120303. Epub 2008 Apr 18.
Fluorescence laser tracking microrheometry (FLTM) is what we believe to be a novel method able to assess the local, frequency-dependent mechanical properties of living cells with nanometer spatial sensitivity at speeds up to 50 kHz. In an earlier article, we described the design, development, and optimization phases of the FLTM before reporting its performances in a variety of viscoelastic materials. In the work presented here, we demonstrate the suitability of FLTM to study local cellular rheology and obtain values for the storage and loss moduli G'(omega) and G''(omega) of fibroblasts consistent with past literature. We further establish that chemically induced cytoskeletal disruption is accompanied by reduced cellular stiffness and viscosity. Next, we provide a systematic study of some experimental variables that may critically influence microrheology measurements. First, we interrogate and justify the relevance of bead endocytosis as a method of cellular internalization of 1-microm probes in FLTM. Second, we show that as sample temperature increases, FLTM findings are elevated toward higher frequencies. Third, we confirm that relevant bead sizes (1 and 2 microm) have no effect on FLTM measurements. Fourth, we report the lack of influence of bead coatings (antiintegrin, antitransferrin, antidystroglycan, or uncoated tracers were surveyed) on their rheological readouts. Finally, we demonstrate the potential of FLTM in studying how substratum rigidity regulates cellular rheological properties. Interestingly, multiple, coupled strain relaxation mechanisms can be observed separated by two plateau moduli. Although these observations can be partly explained by rheological theories describing entangled actin filaments, there is a clear need to extend existing microrheology models to the cytoskeleton, including potentially important factors such as network geometry and remodeling.
荧光激光跟踪微观流变学(FLTM)是一种我们认为的能够以纳米级空间灵敏度,在高达50 kHz的速度下评估活细胞局部频率依赖性力学性能的新方法。在之前的一篇文章中,我们描述了FLTM的设计、开发和优化阶段,然后报告了它在各种粘弹性材料中的性能。在本文介绍的工作中,我们证明了FLTM适用于研究局部细胞流变学,并获得与以往文献一致的成纤维细胞储能模量G'(ω)和损耗模量G''(ω)的值。我们进一步证实,化学诱导的细胞骨架破坏伴随着细胞硬度和粘度的降低。接下来,我们对一些可能严重影响微观流变学测量的实验变量进行了系统研究。首先,我们审视并论证了在FLTM中,珠内吞作用作为一种使1微米探针进入细胞的方法的相关性。其次,我们表明,随着样品温度升高,FLTM的测量结果在更高频率下升高。第三,我们确认相关的珠尺寸(1微米和2微米)对FLTM测量没有影响。第四,我们报告了珠涂层(研究了抗整合素、抗转铁蛋白、抗肌营养不良聚糖或未涂层的示踪剂)对其流变学读数没有影响。最后,我们展示了FLTM在研究基质硬度如何调节细胞流变学特性方面的潜力。有趣的是,可以观察到由两个平台模量分隔的多个耦合应变松弛机制。尽管这些观察结果可以部分地用描述缠结肌动蛋白丝的流变学理论来解释,但显然需要将现有的微观流变学模型扩展到细胞骨架,包括潜在的重要因素,如网络几何形状和重塑。