Publication | Closed Access
Ablation of cytoskeletal filaments and mitochondria in live cells using a femtosecond laser nanoscissor.
123
Citations
47
References
2005
Year
EngineeringMicroscopyLaser ApplicationsMolecular BiologyLaser AblationCytoskeletonCell BiophysicsBiomedical EngineeringCellular PhysiologyLive CellsCell RegulationLaser-surface InteractionsBiophysicsLaser MicroscopyLaser Processing TechnologyCytoskeletal FilamentsBiophotonicsCell ManipulationFemtosecond Laser NanoscissorCell BiologyContinuous NetworkSpatial DiscriminationCellular StructureMedicine
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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