Publication | Closed Access
Active and Passive Microrheology in Equilibrium and Nonequilibrium Systems
181
Citations
49
References
2008
Year
Dynamic EquilibriumEngineeringMultiscale MechanicsMicroscopyMicrorheologyCytoskeletonCell BiophysicsBiomedical EngineeringPassive MicrorheologyActive FluidSoft MatterCell MechanicsCell-substrate InteractionsMechanics ModelingActive MicrorheologyOptical TrapBiophysicsPhysicsActive MatterNon-equilibrium SystemsMyosin Motor ProteinsMaterial MechanicsNon-equilibrium ProcessExperimental BiophysicsMedicine
Measuring mechanical properties of soft matter, especially complex biological materials and living cells, is difficult because of wide scale ranges and internally generated nonequilibrium forces that alter material properties. The authors combine active micromanipulation of probe particles in an optical trap with high‑resolution laser interferometry tracking of their thermal motions to simultaneously measure mechanical properties and identify nonequilibrium forces in soft materials. High‑bandwidth active microrheology outperforms passive methods, revealing high‑frequency power‑law dynamics and low‑frequency local responses in actin networks, quantifying myosin‑driven nonthermal force fluctuations, and providing a direct approach to study nonequilibrium dynamics in living materials.
Quantitatively measuring the mechanical properties of soft matter over a wide range of length and time scales, especially if a sample is as complex as typical biological materials, remains challenging. Living cells present a further complication because forces are generated within these nonequilibrium materials that can change material properties. We have here developed high-bandwidth techniques for active one- and two-particle microrheology to tackle these issues. By combining active micromanipulation of probe particles with an optical trap with high-resolution tracking of thermal motions of the very same particles by laser interferometry, we can both measure the mechanical properties of and, at the same time, identify nonequilibrium forces in soft materials. In both simple liquids and equilibrium cytoskeletal actin networks, active microrheology (AMR) proves to be less noise sensitive than and offers extended bandwidth (0.1−100 kHz) compared to passive microrheology (PMR), which merely tracks thermal motions. We confirm high-frequency power-law dynamics in equilibrium actin networks with two-particle AMR and also discuss low-frequency local mechanical response near probe particles which shows up in one-particle AMR. The combination of AMR and PMR allowed us to quantify nonthermal force fluctuations in actin networks driven by myosin motor proteins. Our approach offers a new direct way to investigate the nonequilibrium dynamics of living materials.
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