Biophysical Reports (Dec 2021)

Advanced quantification for single-cell adhesion by variable-angle TIRF nanoscopy

  • Dalia El Arawi,
  • Cyrille Vézy,
  • Régis Déturche,
  • Maxime Lehmann,
  • Horst Kessler,
  • Monique Dontenwill,
  • Rodolphe Jaffiol

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 2
p. 100021

Abstract

Read online

Over the last decades, several techniques have been developed to study cell adhesion; however, they present significant shortcomings. Such techniques mostly focus on strong adhesion related to specific protein-protein associations, such as ligand-receptor binding in focal adhesions. Therefore, weak adhesion, related to less specific or nonspecific cell-substrate interactions, are rarely addressed. Hence, we propose in this work a complete investigation of cell adhesion, from highly specific to nonspecific adhesiveness, using variable-angle total internal reflection fluorescence (vaTIRF) nanoscopy. This technique allows us to map in real time cell topography with a nanometric axial resolution, along with cell cortex refractive index. These two key parameters allow us to distinguish high and low adhesive cell-substrate contacts. Furthermore, vaTIRF provides cell-substrate binding energy, thus revealing a correlation between cell contractility and cell-substrate binding energy. Here, we highlight the quantitative measurements achieved by vaTIRF on U87MG glioma cells expressing different amounts of α5 integrins and distinct motility on fibronectin. Regarding integrin expression level, data extracted from vaTIRF measurements, such as the number and size of high adhesive contacts per cell, corroborate the adhesiveness of U87MG cells as intended. Interestingly enough, we found that cells overexpressing α5 integrins present a higher contractility and lower adhesion energy.