Special CPM Seminar
Asylum Research Webinar: Recent Advances in AFM
Instrumentation for Biological Studies
Nicholas A. Geisse
Oxford Instruments Asylum Research
The atomic force microscope (AFM) has found broad use in the biological sciences
largely due to its ability to make measurements on unfixed and unstained samples
under liquid. Its ability to image at spatial scales ranging from nanometers
to tens of microns has enabled observations on live samples and has given new
insight into cellular and molecular processes. Recent technical innovations
have further advanced the applicability and utility of the instrument. For
example, Early AFMs were able to collect full-frame images at the few minutes
time-scale. Advances over the past decade have increased this rate at the
cost of instrument usability and flexibility. Asylum's recent launch of the
Cypher VRS has demonstrated imaging scan rates of ~10 frames/sec (625 lines per
sec) on a fully-featured AFM platform. Discussions of the VRS technology and
examples will be presented in this talk. Further, image and force data collected
using Asylum's new Fast Force Mapping mode will be presented and discussed.
In addition to imaging at multiple spatial scales, AFMs are commonly used as
nanomechanical probes. This is especially pertinent for cell and tissue biology,
as it has been demonstrated that the geometrical and mechanical properties
of the extracellular microenvironment are important in such processes as
cancer, cardiovascular disease, muscular dystrophy, and even the control of
cell life and death. Because AFM can quantitatively measure the mechanical
properties of various biological samples, novel insights to cell function and
to cell-substrate interactions are now possible. Mechanical measurements on
soft, sticky, and squishy biological samples with the Atomic Force Microscope
(AFM) are straightforward to perform but complex to interpret accurately
and reproducibly. Although many of the phenomena responsible for this
complexity also exist at the macroscale, their influence on the measurement
increases non-linearly as the spatial scale descends to the AFM's level of
the cell and beyond. Further, the mechanical models we use to interpret the
data are heavily borrowed from macroscale materials sciences- therefore they
do not take the influence of many of these peculiarities into account. As the
application of AFM to these types of problems is widened, it is important to
understand the performance envelope of the technique and its associated data
analyses. This talk will discuss the important issues that must be considered
when macroscopic models are applied to real-world data. Examples of the effect
of different model assumptions on our understanding of the measured material
properties will be shown. Furthermore, specific examples of the importance
of mechanical stimuli and the micromechanical environment to the structure
and function of biological materials will be presented.
Friday, March 10th 2017, 13:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, room 326
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