Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.

Keratin intermediate filaments are the principal structural element of epithelial cells. Their importance in providing bulk cellular stiffness is well recognized, but their role in the mechanics of cell cortex is less understood. In this study, we therefore compared the cortical stiffness of three k...

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Main Authors: Špela Zemljič Jokhadar, Biljana Stojković, Marko Vidak, Tjaša Sorčan, Mirjana Liovic, Marcos Gouveia, Rui D M Travasso, Jure Derganc
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231606
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spelling doaj-47fb437627434f08a3cc0cf82ca08ff42021-03-04T12:45:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e023160610.1371/journal.pone.0231606Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.Špela Zemljič JokhadarBiljana StojkovićMarko VidakTjaša SorčanMirjana LiovicMarcos GouveiaRui D M TravassoJure DergancKeratin intermediate filaments are the principal structural element of epithelial cells. Their importance in providing bulk cellular stiffness is well recognized, but their role in the mechanics of cell cortex is less understood. In this study, we therefore compared the cortical stiffness of three keratinocyte lines: primary wild type cells (NHEK2), immortalized wild type cells (NEB1) and immortalized mutant cells (KEB7). The cortical stiffness was measured by lateral indentation of cells with AOD-steered optical tweezers without employing any moving mechanical elements. The method was validated on fixed cells and Cytochalasin-D treated cells to ensure that the observed variations in stiffness within a single cell line were not a consequence of low measurement precision. The measurements of the cortical stiffness showed that primary wild type cells were significantly stiffer than immortalized wild type cells, which was also detected in previous studies of bulk elasticity. In addition, a small difference between the mutant and the wild type cells was detected, showing that mutation of keratin impacts also the cell cortex. Thus, our results indicate that the role of keratins in cortical stiffness is not negligible and call for further investigation of the mechanical interactions between keratins and elements of the cell cortex.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231606
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Špela Zemljič Jokhadar
Biljana Stojković
Marko Vidak
Tjaša Sorčan
Mirjana Liovic
Marcos Gouveia
Rui D M Travasso
Jure Derganc
spellingShingle Špela Zemljič Jokhadar
Biljana Stojković
Marko Vidak
Tjaša Sorčan
Mirjana Liovic
Marcos Gouveia
Rui D M Travasso
Jure Derganc
Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Špela Zemljič Jokhadar
Biljana Stojković
Marko Vidak
Tjaša Sorčan
Mirjana Liovic
Marcos Gouveia
Rui D M Travasso
Jure Derganc
author_sort Špela Zemljič Jokhadar
title Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.
title_short Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.
title_full Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.
title_fullStr Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.
title_full_unstemmed Cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.
title_sort cortical stiffness of keratinocytes measured by lateral indentation with optical tweezers.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Keratin intermediate filaments are the principal structural element of epithelial cells. Their importance in providing bulk cellular stiffness is well recognized, but their role in the mechanics of cell cortex is less understood. In this study, we therefore compared the cortical stiffness of three keratinocyte lines: primary wild type cells (NHEK2), immortalized wild type cells (NEB1) and immortalized mutant cells (KEB7). The cortical stiffness was measured by lateral indentation of cells with AOD-steered optical tweezers without employing any moving mechanical elements. The method was validated on fixed cells and Cytochalasin-D treated cells to ensure that the observed variations in stiffness within a single cell line were not a consequence of low measurement precision. The measurements of the cortical stiffness showed that primary wild type cells were significantly stiffer than immortalized wild type cells, which was also detected in previous studies of bulk elasticity. In addition, a small difference between the mutant and the wild type cells was detected, showing that mutation of keratin impacts also the cell cortex. Thus, our results indicate that the role of keratins in cortical stiffness is not negligible and call for further investigation of the mechanical interactions between keratins and elements of the cell cortex.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231606
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