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Probing the Membrane Vibration of Single Living Cells by Using Nanopipettes
Author(s) -
Chen BinBin,
Lv Jian,
Wang XiaoYuan,
Qian RuoCan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chembiochem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.05
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 1439-7633
pISSN - 1439-4227
DOI - 10.1002/cbic.201900385
Subject(s) - membrane , vibration , biophysics , cell membrane , nanotechnology , artificial cell , cell , chemistry , biological system , materials science , acoustics , biology , physics , biochemistry
Abstract The vibration of a cell membrane plays a key role in the regulation of cell shape and the behavior of cells. However, most existing approaches for the measurement of cell vibration require either exogenous modification or sophisticated techniques, and the main challenge lies in developing methods that can monitor membrane vibration of living cells directly. Herein, a noninvasive strategy based on ultrasmall quartz nanopipettes is introduced. With a tip size of less than 100 nm, nanopipettes can be spatially controlled for precision targeting of a specific location on the membrane of single living cells. Surprisingly, by employing a constant voltage, stable cyclic oscillations are observed from the continuous current versus time traces. The time‐domain current can be decomposed into two basic waves: the high‐frequency one indicates the local membrane vibration driven by the electro‐osmotic flow from the nanopipette, whereas the low‐frequency one indicates the natural frequency of the whole cell. This provides a simple but reliable method to test local and global membrane vibration of single living cells simultaneously with little damage, which provides a tool for the quantification of drugs, disease, or mutations of the cell structure.

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