Literature DB >> 26040692

Nanomechanical characterization of living mammary tissues by atomic force microscopy.

Marija Plodinec1, Roderick Y H Lim.   

Abstract

The mechanical properties of living cells and tissues are important for a variety of functional processes in vivo, including cell adhesion, migration, proliferation and differentiation. Changes in mechano-cellular phenotype, for instance, are associated with cancer progression. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is an enabling technique that topographically maps and quantifies the mechanical properties of complex biological matter in physiological aqueous environments at the nanometer length scale. Recently we applied AFM to spatially resolve the distribution of nanomechanical stiffness across human breast cancer biopsies in comparison to healthy tissue and benign tumors. This led to the finding that AFM provides quantitative mechano-markers that may have translational significance for the clinical diagnosis of cancer. Here, we provide a comprehensive description of sample preparation methodology, instrumentation, data acquisition and analysis that allows for the quantitative nanomechanical profiling of unadulterated tissue at submicron spatial resolution and nano-Newton (nN) force sensitivity in physiological conditions.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26040692     DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-2519-3_14

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Mol Biol        ISSN: 1064-3745


  7 in total

1.  Cancer-associated fibroblasts induce metalloprotease-independent cancer cell invasion of the basement membrane.

Authors:  Alexandros Glentis; Philipp Oertle; Pascale Mariani; Aleksandra Chikina; Fatima El Marjou; Youmna Attieh; Francois Zaccarini; Marick Lae; Damarys Loew; Florent Dingli; Philemon Sirven; Marie Schoumacher; Basile G Gurchenkov; Marija Plodinec; Danijela Matic Vignjevic
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-10-13       Impact factor: 14.919

2.  Structural centrosome aberrations promote non-cell-autonomous invasiveness.

Authors:  Olivier Ganier; Dominik Schnerch; Philipp Oertle; Roderick Yh Lim; Marija Plodinec; Erich A Nigg
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2018-03-22       Impact factor: 11.598

3.  Quinacrine pretreatment reduces microwave-induced neuronal damage by stabilizing the cell membrane.

Authors:  Xue-Feng Ding; Yan Wu; Wen-Rui Qu; Ming Fan; Yong-Qi Zhao
Journal:  Neural Regen Res       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 5.135

4.  Length Scale Matters: Real-Time Elastography versus Nanomechanical Profiling by Atomic Force Microscopy for the Diagnosis of Breast Lesions.

Authors:  Rosanna Zanetti-Dällenbach; Marija Plodinec; Philipp Oertle; Katharina Redling; Ellen C Obermann; Roderick Y H Lim; Cora-Ann Schoenenberger
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2018-10-16       Impact factor: 3.411

Review 5.  Atomic Force Microscopy on Biological Materials Related to Pathological Conditions.

Authors:  Andreas Stylianou; Stylianos-Vasileios Kontomaris; Colin Grant; Eleni Alexandratou
Journal:  Scanning       Date:  2019-05-12       Impact factor: 1.932

6.  TAGLN mediated stiffness-regulated ovarian cancer progression via RhoA/ROCK pathway.

Authors:  Xiao Wei; Hua Lou; Dongchen Zhou; Yijuan Jia; Huayi Li; Quanfu Huang; Jingjing Ma; Zongyuan Yang; Chaoyang Sun; Yunchong Meng; Sen Xu; Xin Yang; Xiaoting Li; Teng Ji; Zhongzhen Guo; Qinglei Gao
Journal:  J Exp Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2021-09-19

7.  Stain-free identification of tissue pathology using a generative adversarial network to infer nanomechanical signatures.

Authors:  Lydia Neary-Zajiczek; Clara Essmann; Anita Rau; Sophia Bano; Neil Clancy; Marnix Jansen; Lauren Heptinstall; Elena Miranda; Amir Gander; Vijay Pawar; Delmiro Fernandez-Reyes; Michael Shaw; Brian Davidson; Danail Stoyanov
Journal:  Nanoscale Adv       Date:  2021-09-02
  7 in total

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