4.5 Article

Strain-dependent elastography of cancer cells reveals heterogeneity and stiffening due to attachment

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
Volume 150, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2023.111479

Keywords

Atomic force microscopy; Cancer cell mechanics; Cellular biophysics; Elastic moduli; Actin cytoskeleton

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By using an indentation-dependent pointwise Hertzian method, we measured the biomechanical spatial heterogeneity of ovarian and breast cancer cells. Recording stiffness at a particular strain may improve the comparison of cell material properties and produce higher contrast representations of cell mechanical properties. We observed that the perinuclear region of cancer cells was softer relative to the lamelopodial stiffness, and a significant stiffening phenomenon was found in the thin lamellipodial region.
Because cells vary in thickness and in biomechanical properties, the use of a constant force trigger during atomic force microscopy (AFM) stiffness mapping produces a varied nominal strain that can obfuscate the comparison of local material properties. In this study, we measured the biomechanical spatial heterogeneity of ovarian and breast cancer cells by using an indentation-dependent pointwise Hertzian method. Force curves and surface topography were used together to determine cell stiffness as a function of nominal strain. By recording stiffness at a particular strain, it may be possible to improve comparison of the material properties of cells and produce higher contrast representations of cell mechanical properties. Defining a linear region of elasticity that corre-sponds to a modest nominal strain, we were able to clearly distinguish the mechanics of the perinuclear region of cells. We observed that, relative to the lamelopodial stiffness, the perinuclear region was softer for metastatic cancer cells than their nonmetastatic counterparts. Moreover, contrast in the strain-dependent elastography in comparison to conventional force mapping with Hertzian model analysis revealed a significant stiffening phe-nomenon in the thin lamellipodial region in which the modulus scales inversely and exponentially with cell thickness. The observed exponential stiffening is not affected by relaxation of cytoskeletal tension, but finite element modeling indicates it is affected by substrate adhesion. The novel cell mapping technique explores cancer cell mechanical nonlinearity that results from regional heterogeneity, which could help explain how metastatic cancer cells can show soft phenotypes while simultaneously increasing force generation and invasiveness.

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