Abstract

Traction force microscopy (TFM) is a quantitative technique for measuring cellular traction force, which is important in understanding cellular mechanotransduction processes. Traditional TFM has a significant limitation in that it has a low measurement throughput, commonly one per TFM dish, due to a lack of cell position information. To obtain enough cellular traction force data, an onerous workload is required including numerous TFM dish preparations and heavy cell-seeding activities, creating further difficulty in achieving identical experimental conditions among batches. In this paper, we present an improved-throughput TFM method using the well-developed microcontact printing technique and chemical modifications of linking microbeads to the gel surface to address these limitations. Chemically linking the microbeads to the gel surface has no significant influence on cell proliferation, morphology, cytoskeleton, and adhesion. Multiple pairs of force loaded and null force fluorescence images can be easily acquired by means of manual microscope with the aid of a fluorescence micropattern made by microcontact printing. Furthermore, keeping the micropattern separate from cells by using gels effectively eliminates the potential negative effect of the micropattern on the cells. This novel design greatly improves the analysis throughput of traditional TFM from one to at least twenty cells per petri dish without losing unique advantages, including a high spatial resolution of traction measurements. This newly developed method will boost the investigation of cell-matrix mechanical interactions.

Highlights

  • Cellular traction force is the physical force exerted by cells on the extracellular matrix

  • Traction force microscopy (TFM) is an efficient and reliable method to determine the cellular traction forces acting on a flat flexible substrate [13,14,15]

  • An FL image is a fluorescence image of the deformation of soft substrates caused by cells, and an NF image is a fluorescence image of undeformed elastic substrates taken at the same location by detaching the cell through trypsinization or similar methods [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Cellular traction force is the physical force exerted by cells on the extracellular matrix. In the traditional TFM protocol, though plenty of isolated cells exist on the surface of relatively large substrates in one dish, and given that fluorescence microbeads are randomly dispersed, it is nearly impossible to return to the exact position of each cell from the last view field when capturing its NF image.

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