Ablation of cytoskeletal filaments and mitochondria in live cells using a femtosecond laser nanoscissor.
Author(s) -
Nan Shen,
Dabajyoti Datta,
Chris B Schaffer,
Philip LeDuc,
Donald E Ingber,
Eric Mazur
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
mechanics and chemistry of biosystems : mcb
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1546-2048
DOI - 10.3970/mcb.2005.002.017
Analysis of cell regulation requires methods for perturbing molecular processes within living cells with spatial discrimination on the nanometer-scale. We present a technique for ablating molecular structures in living cells using low-repetition rate, low-energy femtosecond laser pulses. By tightly focusing these pulses beneath the cell membrane, we ablate cellular material inside the cell through nonlinear processes. We selectively removed sub-micrometer regions of the cytoskeleton and individual mitochondria without altering neighboring structures or compromising cell viability. This nanoscissor technique enables non-invasive manipulation of the structural machinery of living cells with several-hundred-nanometer resolution. Using this approach, we unequivocally demonstrate that mitochondria are structurally independent functional units, and do not form a continuous network as suggested by some past studies.
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