Deep-tissue absolute force spectroscopy with sub-piconewton precision

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Quantitative measurements performed directly in vivo are necessary to understand how forces shape living tissues, yet this remains challenging due to optical scattering and mechanical complexity. Here, we present a method for making absolute force measurements using nanoscopic optical tweezers with a sensitivity of 300 fN in optically turbid biological media. Our approach combines back focal plane interferometry operating within the optical memory effect regime with a global fluctuation-dissipation fitting framework that simultaneously calibrates position detection, trap stiffness, and viscoelastic response. This method overcomes aberration-induced biases by jointly fitting passive fluctuations and driven harmonic responses, enabling robust force reconstruction in thick, scattering tissues within the mechanically relevant frequency range below 300 Hz. We validate our approach using highly scattering Drosophila pupae and embryos, demonstrating reliable in vivo measurements of forces and mechanical properties. Operating at a 1 kHz acquisition bandwidth, the system captures relevant mechanical dynamics without requiring extended high-frequency detection. Using this framework, we quantify the increase in cortical tension during pupal morphogenesis, characterize tissue viscoelasticity, and reveal stage-dependent variations in nuclear membrane tension during embryogenesis, even in the presence of strong ATP-driven fluctuations. Beyond bulk measurements, our method enables the quantitative mechanical characterization of single cells within mechanically coupled tissues.

Article activity feed