Microrheology, stress fluctuations and active behavior of living cells
Preprint
- 22 September 2003
Abstract
We report the first measurements of the intrinsic strain fluctuations of living cells using a recently-developed tracer correlation technique along with a theoretical framework for interpreting such data in heterogeneous media with non-thermal driving. The fluctuations' spatial and temporal correlations indicate that the cytoskeleton can be treated as a course-grained continuum with power-law rheology, driven by a spatially random stress tensor field. Combined with recent cell rheology results, our data imply that intracellular stress fluctuations have a nearly $1/\omega^2$ power spectrum, as expected for a continuum with a slowly evolving internal prestress.
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All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2003-09-22, ArXiv
- Published version: Physical Review Letters, 91 (19), 198101.
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