49 research outputs found

    Measurement of junctional tension in epithelial cells at the onset of primitive streak formation in the chick embryo via non-destructive optical manipulation

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    Directional cell intercalations of epithelial cells during gastrulation has in several organisms been shown to be associated with a planar cell polarity in the organisation of the actin-myosin cytoskeleton and is postulated to reflect directional tension that drives oriented cell intercalations. We have characterised and applied a recently introduced non-destructive optical manipulation technique to measure the tension in individual epithelial cell junctions of cells in various locations and orientations in the epiblast of chick embryos in the early stages of primitive streak formation. Junctional tension of mesendoderm precursors in the epiblast is higher in junctions oriented in the direction of intercalation than in junctions oriented perpendicular to the direction of intercalation and higher than in junctions of other cells in the epiblast. The kinetic data are fitted best with a simple visco-elastic Maxwell model and we find that junctional tension and to a lesser extent viscoelastic relaxation time are dependent on myosin activity

    Effect of the size and shape of a red blood cell on elastic light scattering properties at the single-cell level

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    We demonstrate the use of a double-beam optical tweezers system to stabilize red blood cell (RBC) orientation in the optical tweezers during measurements of elastic light scattering from the trapped cells in an angle range of 5-30 degrees. Another laser (He-Ne) was used to illuminate the cell and elastic light scattering distribution from the single cell was measured with a goniometer and a photomultiplier tube. Moreover, CCD camera images of RBCs with and without laser illumination are presented as complementary information. Light scattering from a RBC was measured in different fixed orientations. Light scattering from cells was also measured when the length of the cell was changed in two different orientations. Light scattering measurements from spherical and crenate RBCs are described and the results are compared with other cell orientations. Analysis shows that the measured elastic light scattering distributions reveal changes in the RBC’s orientation and shape. The effect of stretching on the changes in scattering is larger in the case of face-on incidence of He-Ne laser light than in rim-on incidence. The scattering patterns from RBCs in different orientations as well as from a spherical RBC were compared with numerical results found in literature. Good correlation was found

    Assembling Neurospheres: Dynamics of Neural Progenitor/Stem Cell Aggregation Probed Using an Optical Trap

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    Optical trapping (tweezing) has been used in conjunction with fluid flow technology to dissect the mechanics and spatio-temporal dynamics of how neural progenitor/stem cells (NSCs) adhere and aggregate. Hitherto unavailable information has been obtained on the most probable minimum time (∼5 s) and most probable minimum distance of approach (4–6 µm) required for irreversible adhesion of proximate cells to occur. Our experiments also allow us to study and quantify the spatial characteristics of filopodial- and membrane-mediated adhesion, and to probe the functional dynamics of NSCs to quantify a lower limit of the adhesive force by which NSCs aggregate (∼18 pN). Our findings, which we also validate by computational modeling, have important implications for the neurosphere assay: once aggregated, neurospheres cannot disassemble merely by being subjected to shaking or by thermal effects. Our findings provide quantitative affirmation to the notion that the neurosphere assay may not be a valid measure of clonality and “stemness”. Post-adhesion dynamics were also studied and oscillatory motion in filopodia-mediated adhesion was observed. Furthermore, we have also explored the effect of the removal of calcium ions: both filopodia-mediated as well as membrane-membrane adhesion were inhibited. On the other hand, F-actin disrupted the dynamics of such adhesion events such that filopodia-mediated adhesion was inhibited but not membrane-membrane adhesion

    Three-dimensional holographic optical manipulation through a high-numerical-aperture soft-glass multimode fibre

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    Holographic optical tweezers (HOT) hold great promise for many applications in biophotonics, allowing the creation and measurement of minuscule forces on biomolecules, molecular motors and cells. Geometries used in HOT currently rely on bulk optics, and their exploitation in vivo is compromised by the optically turbid nature of tissues. We present an alternative HOT approach in which multiple three-dimensional (3D) traps are introduced through a high-numerical-aperture multimode optical fibre, thus enabling an equally versatile means of manipulation through channels having cross-section comparable to the size of a single cell. Our work demonstrates real-time manipulation of 3D arrangements of micro-objects, as well as manipulation inside otherwise inaccessible cavities. We show that the traps can be formed over fibre lengths exceeding 100 mm and positioned with nanometric resolution. The results provide the basis for holographic manipulation and other high-numerical-aperture techniques, including advanced microscopy, through single-core-fibre endoscopes deep inside living tissues and other complex environments

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    Understanding the mechanisms regulating development requires a quantitative characterization of cell divisions, rearrangements, cell size and shape changes, and apoptoses. We developed a multiscale formalism that relates the characterizations of each cell process to tissue growth and morphogenesis. Having validated the formalism on computer simulations, we quantified separately all morphogenetic events in the Drosophila dorsal thorax and wing pupal epithelia to obtain comprehensive statistical maps linking cell and tissue scale dynamics. While globally cell shape changes, rearrangements and divisions all significantly participate in tissue morphogenesis, locally, their relative participations display major variations in space and time. By blocking division we analyzed the impact of division on rearrangements, cell shape changes and tissue morphogenesis. Finally, by combining the formalism with mechanical stress measurement, we evidenced unexpected interplays between patterns of tissue elongation, cell division and stress. Our formalism provides a novel and rigorous approach to uncover mechanisms governing tissue development. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.08519.00

    Applying optical tweezers in vivo : A biophysical study of mechanical forces in Drosophila Melanogaster at the onset of gastrulation

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    Nous avons développé un dispositif combinant pinces optiques et imagerie par feuillet de lumière. Nous montrons que les interfaces cellulaires de l'épithélium précoce de l'embryon de Drosophile peuvent être piégées et manipulées directement avec des pinces optiques. La manipulation optique est réalisée à la fin de la cellularisation, processus par lequel des membranes cellulaires séparent les noyaux pour donner naissance à un épithélium ; à ce stade, les mouvements cellulaires sont minimes et les cellules ont des formes hexagonales similaires. En imposant un mouvement sinusoïdal au piège perpendiculairement à une interface, nous étudions la déflection de l'interface en fonction de la puissance laser, de l'amplitude du mouvement du piège et de la fréquence d'oscillation. En outre, des expériences de déflection-relaxation par déplacement instantané puis arrêt du piégeage, ont été réalisées, fournissant une alternative à l'analyse fréquentielle pour étudier les propriétés viscoélastiques de l'interface. Un modèle de type solide linéaire standard rend compte des observations et permet d'extraire les paramètres viscoélastiques de l'interface. Nous mettons également en évidence que la déflection imposée à une interface se propage aux interfaces voisines en s'affaiblissant exponentiellement sur une distance d'une à deux cellules. Cette technique étant établie, nous l'utilisons pour mesurer les tensions durant l'extension de la bandelette germinale. Les tensions sont anisotropes, les jonctions parallèles à la direction dorsoventrale ayant une tension trois fois plus élevée que celles perpendiculaires. Ce travail fournit des mesures absolues des tensions intercellulaire.Here, an optical tweezers setup was developed on a pre-existing single-plane illumination (SPIM) setup. The cell-cell interface in embryonic epithelia could be trapped and manipulated directly with optical tweezers. The interaction of the interface with the trap was initially characterized at the end of cellularization where the tissue has minimal movements and actomyosin turnover. With a sinusoidal trap excursion, the interface amplitude was found to increase linearly with applied laser power as well as trap amplitude and time period. Furthermore, push and pull experiments on the interface responding to a stationary trap, provided another way to address the viscoelastic properties of the interface. The interface kinetics in stationary experiments could fit adequately to a passive viscoelastic model. This model also explained well the linear response to trap amplitude and time period, and formed the basis of estimating interface tension from its amplitude. Moreover, the propagation of the sinusoidal movement to neighbouring interfaces decayed rapidly with minimal phase lag in both experiments and the model. Having established a suitable regime of trapping conditions, where interface deflection is small and linear, the mechanical anisotropy of the epithelium was at the onset of gastrulation. The interface tension increased by 2-3 fold, exhibiting both apico-basal and dorso-ventral polarization of tension, concomitant with polarized accumulation of myosin. The role of myosin was established further through ROCK-inhibition. Perturbation of actin also decreased the interface tension. My work provides a crucial insight into the mechanical behaviour of dynamic epithelia

    Direct laser manipulation reveals the mechanics of cell contacts in vivo

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    International audienceCell-generated forces produce a variety of tissue movements and tissue shape changes. The cytoskeletal elements that underlie these dynamics act at cell-cell and cell-ECM contacts to apply local forces on adhesive structures. In epithelia, force imbalance at cell contacts induces cell shape changes, such as apical constriction or polarized junction remodeling, driving tissue morphogenesis. The dynamics of these processes are well-characterized; however, the mechanical basis of cell shape changes is largely unknown because of a lack of mechanical measurements in vivo. We have developed an approach combining optical tweezers with light-sheet microscopy to probe the mechanical properties of epithelial cell junctions in the early Drosophila embryo. We show that optical trapping can efficiently deform cell-cell interfaces and measure tension at cell junctions, which is on the order of 100 pN. We show that tension at cell junctions equilibrates over a few seconds, a short timescale compared with the contractile events that drive morphogenetic movements. We also show that tension increases along cell interfaces during early tissue morphogenesis and becomes anisotropic as cells intercalate during germ-band extension. By performing pull-and-release experiments, we identify time-dependent properties of junctional mechanics consistent with a simple viscoelastic model. Integrating this constitutive law into a tissue-scale model, we predict quantitatively how local deformations propagate throughout the tissue
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