PeakForce Tapping resolves individual microvilli on living cells.

J Mol Recognit

Bruker Nano Surfaces Division, 112 Robin Hill Rd, Santa Barbara, CA, 93117, USA.

Published: February 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microvilli enhance the surface area of epithelial cells, improving transport and acting as mechanosensors, but their degradation can lead to malabsorption and diarrhea.
  • Atomic force microscopy (AFM) is used to study cell structures, but visualizing microvilli has been difficult due to their flexibility and interaction with the probe.
  • The introduction of PeakForce Tapping® AFM mode allows for effective imaging of microvilli on living cells with minimal deformation, demonstrating its ability to visualize these structures in real-time under physiological conditions.

Article Abstract

Microvilli are a common structure found on epithelial cells that increase the apical surface thus enhancing the transmembrane transport capacity and also serve as one of the cell's mechanosensors. These structures are composed of microfilaments and cytoplasm, covered by plasma membrane. Epithelial cell function is usually coupled to the density of microvilli and its individual size illustrated by diseases, in which microvilli degradation causes malabsorption and diarrhea. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) has been widely used to study the topography and morphology of living cells. Visualizing soft and flexible structures such as microvilli on the apical surface of a live cell has been very challenging because the native microvilli structures are displaced and deformed by the interaction with the probe. PeakForce Tapping® is an AFM imaging mode, which allows reducing tip-sample interactions in time (microseconds) and controlling force in the low pico-Newton range. Data acquisition of this mode was optimized by using a newly developed PeakForce QNM-Live Cell probe, having a short cantilever with a 17-µm-long tip that minimizes hydrodynamic effects between the cantilever and the sample surface. In this paper, we have demonstrated for the first time the visualization of the microvilli on living kidney cells with AFM using PeakForce Tapping. The structures observed display a force dependence representing either the whole microvilli or just the tips of the microvilli layer. Together, PeakForce Tapping allows force control in the low pico-Newton range and enables the visualization of very soft and flexible structures on living cells under physiological conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5054848PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmr.2510DOI Listing

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