mechano- and visco-NPS: An Electronic Method to Measure the Mechanical Properties of Cells
Lydia Sohn, Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley
We have developed an efficient, label-free method of screening cells for their phenotypic profile, which we call Node-Pore Sensing (NPS). NPS involves measuring the modulated current pulse caused by a cell transiting a microfluidic channel that has been segmented by a series of inserted nodes. Previously, we showed that when segments between the nodes are functionalized with different antibodies corresponding to distinct cell-surface antigens, immunophenotyping can be achieved. In this talk, I will show how we have significantly advanced NPS by simply inserting between two nodes a “contraction” channel through which cells can squeeze. “Mechano-NPS”, as we now call our method, can simultaneously measure a cell’s size, resistance to deformation, transverse deformation, and ability to recover from deformation. As I will show, mechano-NPS can distinguish malignant from non-malignant epithelial cells and discriminate between sub-lineages and, excitingly, chronological age groups of primary human mammary epithelial cells. Moreover, mechano-NPS can track malignant progression. By replacing the contraction channel with one that is sinusoidal in shape, we can measure the viscoelastic properties (elasticity and viscosity) of cells. I will show how “visco-NPS” can quantify the mechanical transitions of cells as they traverse the cell cycle or are initiated into an epithelial-mesenchymal transition.
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