| Literature DB >> 36053000 |
Richard Gerum1,2, Elham Mirzahossein1, Mar Eroles3, Jennifer Elsterer1, Astrid Mainka1, Andreas Bauer1, Selina Sonntag1, Alexander Winterl1, Johannes Bartl1, Lena Fischer1, Shada Abuhattum4, Ruchi Goswami4, Salvatore Girardo4, Jochen Guck1,4, Stefan Schrüfer5, Nadine Ströhlein1, Mojtaba Nosratlo1, Harald Herrmann6, Dorothea Schultheis6, Felix Rico3, Sebastian Johannes Müller7, Stephan Gekle7, Ben Fabry1.
Abstract
Numerous cell functions are accompanied by phenotypic changes in viscoelastic properties, and measuring them can help elucidate higher level cellular functions in health and disease. We present a high-throughput, simple and low-cost microfluidic method for quantitatively measuring the elastic (storage) and viscous (loss) modulus of individual cells. Cells are suspended in a high-viscosity fluid and are pumped with high pressure through a 5.8 cm long and 200 µm wide microfluidic channel. The fluid shear stress induces large, ear ellipsoidal cell deformations. In addition, the flow profile in the channel causes the cells to rotate in a tank-treading manner. From the cell deformation and tank treading frequency, we extract the frequency-dependent viscoelastic cell properties based on a theoretical framework developed by R. Roscoe [1] that describes the deformation of a viscoelastic sphere in a viscous fluid under steady laminar flow. We confirm the accuracy of the method using atomic force microscopy-calibrated polyacrylamide beads and cells. Our measurements demonstrate that suspended cells exhibit power-law, soft glassy rheological behavior that is cell-cycle-dependent and mediated by the physical interplay between the actin filament and intermediate filament networks.Entities:
Keywords: cell biology; cell rheology; human; microfluidics; mouse; shear flow; tank treading; viscoelasticity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36053000 PMCID: PMC9576269 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.78823
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.713