Litcius/Paper detail

Characterizing intracellular mechanics via optical tweezers-based microrheology

Bart E. Vos, Till M. Muenker, Timo Betz

2024Current Opinion in Cell Biology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Intracellular organization is a highly regulated homeostatic state maintained to ensure eukaryotic cells' correct and efficient functioning. Thanks to decades of research, vast knowledge of the proteins involved in intracellular transport and organization has been acquired. However, how these influence and potentially regulate the intracellular mechanical properties of the cell is largely unknown. There is a deep knowledge gap between the understanding of cortical mechanics, which is accessible by a series of experimental tools, and the intracellular situation that has been largely neglected due to the difficulty of performing intracellular mechanics measurements. Recently, tools required for such quantitative and localized analysis of intracellular mechanics have been introduced. Here, we review how these approaches and the resulting viscoelastic models lead the way to a full mechanical description of the cytoplasm, which is instrumental for a quantitative characterization of the intracellular life of cells.

Topics & Concepts

MicrorheologyOptical tweezersBiologyBiophysicsPhysicsOpticsRheologyThermodynamicsCellular Mechanics and InteractionsBlood properties and coagulationBiocrusts and Microbial Ecology