Polyacrylamide Bead Sensors for in vivo Quantification of Cell-Scale Stress in Zebrafish Development

  • Träber, N.
  • Uhlmann, K.
  • Girardo, S.
  • Kesavan, G.
  • Wagner, K.
  • Friedrichs, J.
  • Goswami, R.
  • Bai, K.
  • Brand, M.
  • Werner, C.
  • Balzani, D.
  • Guck, J.
Publication date
November 2019
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Abstract

Mechanical stress exerted and experienced by cells during tissue morphogenesis and organ formation plays an important role in embryonic development. While techniques to quantify mechanical stresses in vitro are available, few methods exist for studying stresses in living organisms. Here, we describe and characterize cell-like polyacrylamide (PAAm) bead sensors with well-defined elastic properties and size for in vivo quantification of cell-scale stresses. The beads were injected into developing zebrafish embryos and their deformations were computationally analyzed to delineate spatio-temporal local acting stresses. With this computational analysis-based cell-scale stress sensing (COMPAX) we are able to detect pulsatile pressure propagation ...

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