Issue 38, 2016

Low Stress Ion Conductance Microscopy of Sub-Cellular Stiffness

Abstract

Directly examining subcellular mechanics whilst avoiding excessive strain of a live cell requires the precise control of light stress on very small areas, which is fundamentally difficult. Here we use a glass nanopipet out of contact with the plasma membrane to both exert the stress on the cell and also accurately monitor cellular compression. This allows the mapping of cell stiffness at a lateral resolution finer than 100 nm. We calculate the stress a nanopipet exerts on a cell as the sum of the intrinsic pressure between the tip face and the plasma membrane plus its direct pressure on any glycocalyx, both evaluated from the gap size in terms of the ion current decrease. A survey of cell types confirms that an intracellular pressure of approximately 120 Pa begins to detach the plasma membrane from the cytoskeleton and reveals that the first 0.66 ± 0.09 μm of compression of a neuron cell body is much softer than previous methods have been able to detect.

Graphical abstract: Low Stress Ion Conductance Microscopy of Sub-Cellular Stiffness

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 May 2016
Accepted
16 Aug 2016
First published
17 Aug 2016
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2016,12, 7953-7958

Low Stress Ion Conductance Microscopy of Sub-Cellular Stiffness

R. W. Clarke, P. Novak, A. Zhukov, E. J. Tyler, M. Cano-Jaimez, A. Drews, O. Richards, K. Volynski, C. Bishop and D. Klenerman, Soft Matter, 2016, 12, 7953 DOI: 10.1039/C6SM01106C

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