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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on August 4, 2006.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.106.088831
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Biophysical Journal 91:3508-3518 (2006)
© 2006 The Biophysical Society

Rheology of Passive and Adhesion-Activated Neutrophils Probed by Atomic Force Microscopy

Pere Roca-Cusachs, Isaac Almendros, Raimon Sunyer, Núria Gavara, Ramon Farré and Daniel Navajas

Unitat de Biofísica i Bioenginyeria, Facultat de Medicina, Universitat de Barcelona–IDIBAPS, 08036 Barcelona, Spain

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Daniel Navajas, PhD, Professor of Physiology, Unitat de Biofísica i Bioenginyeria Facultat de Medicina–Universitat de Barcelona Casanova, 143 08036-Barcelona, Spain. Tel.: 34-93-402-4515; Fax: 34-93-402-4516; E-mail: dnavajas{at}ub.edu.

The rheology of neutrophils in their passive and activated states plays a key role in determining their function in response to inflammatory stimuli. Atomic force microscopy was used to study neutrophil rheology by measuring the complex shear modulus G*({omega}) of passive nonadhered rat neutrophils on poly(HEMA) and neutrophils activated through adhesion to glass. G*({omega}) was measured over three frequency decades (0.1–102.4 Hz) by indenting the cells 500 nm with a spherical tip and then applying a 50-nm amplitude multi-frequency signal. G*({omega}) of both passive and adhered neutrophils increased as a power law with frequency, with a coupling between elastic (G') and loss (G'') moduli. For passive neutrophils at 1.6 Hz, G' = 380 ± 121 Pa, whereas G'' was fourfold smaller and the power law coefficient was of x = 1.184. Adhered neutrophils were over twofold stiffer with a lower slope (x = 1.148). This behavior was adequately described by the power law structural damping model but not by liquid droplet and Kelvin models. The increase in stiffness with frequency may modulate neutrophil transit, arrest, and transmigration in vascular microcirculation.




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