- Pushkarsky, Ivan;
- Tseng, Peter;
- Black, Dylan;
- France, Bryan;
- Warfe, Lyndon;
- Koziol-White, Cynthia J;
- Jester, William F;
- Trinh, Ryan K;
- Lin, Jonathan;
- Scumpia, Philip O;
- Morrison, Sherie L;
- Panettieri, Reynold A;
- Damoiseaux, Robert;
- Di Carlo, Dino
As cells with aberrant force-generating phenotypes can directly lead to disease, cellular force-generation mechanisms are high-value targets for new therapies. Here, we show that single-cell force sensors embedded in elastomers enable single-cell force measurements with ~100-fold improvement in throughput than was previously possible. The microtechnology is scalable and seamlessly integrates with the multi-well plate format, enabling highly parallelized time-course studies. In this regard, we show that airway smooth muscle cells isolated from fatally asthmatic patients have innately greater and faster force-generation capacity in response to stimulation than healthy control cells. By simultaneously tracing agonist-induced calcium flux and contractility in the same cell, we show that the calcium level is ultimately a poor quantitative predictor of cellular force generation. Finally, by quantifying phagocytic forces in thousands of individual human macrophages, we show that force initiation is a digital response (rather than a proportional one) to the proper immunogen. By combining mechanobiology at the single-cell level with high-throughput capabilities, this microtechnology can support drug-discovery efforts for clinical conditions associated with aberrant cellular force generation.