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Measuring the Bending Stiffness of Bacterial Cells Using an Optical Trap
Authors:Siyuan Wang  Hugo Arellano-Santoyo  Peter A. Combs  Joshua W. Shaevitz
Affiliation:Department of Molecular Biology, Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University;Department of Physics, Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University
Abstract:We developed a protocol to measure the bending rigidity of filamentous rod-shaped bacteria. Forces are applied with an optical trap, a microscopic three-dimensional spring made of light that is formed when a high-intensity laser beam is focused to a very small spot by a microscope''s objective lens. To bend a cell, we first bind live bacteria to a chemically-treated coverslip. As these cells grow, the middle of the cells remains bound to the coverslip but the growing ends are free of this restraint. By inducing filamentous growth with the drug cephalexin, we are able to identify cells in which one end of the cell was stuck to the surface while the other end remained unattached and susceptible to bending forces. A bending force is then applied with an optical trap by binding a polylysine-coated bead to the tip of a growing cell. Both the force and the displacement of the bead are recorded and the bending stiffness of the cell is the slope of this relationship.Download video file.(65M, mp4)
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