Issue 42, 2016

Nano-mechanical single-cell sensing of cell–matrix contacts

Abstract

Extracellular protein matrices provide a rigidity interface exhibiting nano-mechanical cues that guide cell growth and proliferation. Cells sense such cues using actin-rich filopodia extensions which encourage favourable cell–matrix contacts to recruit more actin-mediated local forces into forming stable focal adhesions. A challenge remains in identifying and measuring these local cellular forces and in establishing empirical relationships between them, cell adhesion and filopodia formation. Here we investigate such relationships using a micromanipulation system designed to operate at the time scale of focal contact dynamics, with the sample frequency of a force probe being 0.1 ms, and to apply and measure forces at nano-to-micro Newton ranges for individual mammalian cells. We explore correlations between cell biomechanics, cell–matrix attachment forces and the spread areas of adhered cells as well as their relative dependence on filopodia formation using synthetic protein matrices with a proven ability to induce enhanced filopodia numbers in adherent cells. This study offers a basis for engineering exploitable cell–matrix contacts in situ at the nanoscale and single-cell levels.

Graphical abstract: Nano-mechanical single-cell sensing of cell–matrix contacts

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Jul 2016
Accepted
06 Oct 2016
First published
07 Oct 2016

Nanoscale, 2016,8, 18105-18112

Nano-mechanical single-cell sensing of cell–matrix contacts

L. Zajiczek, M. Shaw, N. Faruqui, A. Bella, V. M. Pawar, M. A. Srinivasan and M. G. Ryadnov, Nanoscale, 2016, 8, 18105 DOI: 10.1039/C6NR05667A

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