Where No Hand Has Gone Before: Probing Mechanobiology at the Cellular Level

ACS Biomater Sci Eng. 2019 Aug 12;5(8):3703-3719. doi: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.8b01206. Epub 2018 Dec 20.

Abstract

Physical forces and other mechanical stimuli are fundamental regulators of cell behavior and function. Cells are also biomechanically competent: they generate forces to migrate, contract, remodel, and sense their environment. As the knowledge of the mechanisms of mechanobiology increases, the need to resolve and probe increasingly small scales calls for novel technologies to mechanically manipulate cells, examine forces exerted by cells, and characterize cellular biomechanics. Here, we review novel methods to quantify cellular force generation, measure cell mechanical properties, and exert localized piconewton and nanonewton forces on cells, receptors, and proteins. The combination of these technologies will provide further insight on the effect of mechanical stimuli on cells and the mechanisms that convert these stimuli into biochemical and biomechanical activity.

Keywords: cell compliance; cellular biomechanics; mechanosensing; mechanotransduction; microrheology; traction force microscopy.