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Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes

PURPOSE: To demonstrate the feasibility of measuring the elasticity of intact crystalline lenses using atomic force microscopy (AFM). METHODS: AFM elasticity measurements were performed on intact lenses from 18 fresh cynomolgus monkey cadaver eyes (4-10 years old, <1 day postmortem) that had been...

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Autores principales: Ziebarth, Noël M., Wojcikiewicz, Ewa P., Manns, Fabrice, Moy, Vincent T., Parel, Jean-Marie
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2649306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17417612
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author Ziebarth, Noël M.
Wojcikiewicz, Ewa P.
Manns, Fabrice
Moy, Vincent T.
Parel, Jean-Marie
author_facet Ziebarth, Noël M.
Wojcikiewicz, Ewa P.
Manns, Fabrice
Moy, Vincent T.
Parel, Jean-Marie
author_sort Ziebarth, Noël M.
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To demonstrate the feasibility of measuring the elasticity of intact crystalline lenses using atomic force microscopy (AFM). METHODS: AFM elasticity measurements were performed on intact lenses from 18 fresh cynomolgus monkey cadaver eyes (4-10 years old, <1 day postmortem) that had been left attached to their zonule-ciliary body-sclera framework. The eyes were prepared by bonding a plastic ring on the sclera after removal of the conjunctival, adipose, and muscle tissues. The posterior pole was sectioned, with the excess vitreous removed, and the eye's anterior section was placed on a Teflon slide to protect the posterior pole of the lens. The cornea and iris were then sectioned. The lens-zonule-ciliary body-sclera section was then placed in a Petri dish filled with balanced salt solution in an AFM system designed for force measurements. Next, the central pole of the anterior surface of the intact lens was probed with the AFM cantilever tip. The recorded AFM cantilever deflection-indentation curves were used to derive force-indentation curves for the lens after factoring out the deflection of the cantilever on a hard surface. Young's modulus of the lens was calculated from the force-indentation relation using the Hertz model. RESULTS: Young's modulus was 1,720±880 Pa (range: 409-3,210 Pa) in the 18 cynomolgus monkey lenses. CONCLUSIONS: AFM can be used to provide measurements of the elasticity of the whole lens including the capsule. Values obtained using AFM on cynomolgus monkey lenses are similar to published values obtained using dynamic mechanical analysis on young human lenses.
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spelling pubmed-26493062009-03-02 Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes Ziebarth, Noël M. Wojcikiewicz, Ewa P. Manns, Fabrice Moy, Vincent T. Parel, Jean-Marie Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: To demonstrate the feasibility of measuring the elasticity of intact crystalline lenses using atomic force microscopy (AFM). METHODS: AFM elasticity measurements were performed on intact lenses from 18 fresh cynomolgus monkey cadaver eyes (4-10 years old, <1 day postmortem) that had been left attached to their zonule-ciliary body-sclera framework. The eyes were prepared by bonding a plastic ring on the sclera after removal of the conjunctival, adipose, and muscle tissues. The posterior pole was sectioned, with the excess vitreous removed, and the eye's anterior section was placed on a Teflon slide to protect the posterior pole of the lens. The cornea and iris were then sectioned. The lens-zonule-ciliary body-sclera section was then placed in a Petri dish filled with balanced salt solution in an AFM system designed for force measurements. Next, the central pole of the anterior surface of the intact lens was probed with the AFM cantilever tip. The recorded AFM cantilever deflection-indentation curves were used to derive force-indentation curves for the lens after factoring out the deflection of the cantilever on a hard surface. Young's modulus of the lens was calculated from the force-indentation relation using the Hertz model. RESULTS: Young's modulus was 1,720±880 Pa (range: 409-3,210 Pa) in the 18 cynomolgus monkey lenses. CONCLUSIONS: AFM can be used to provide measurements of the elasticity of the whole lens including the capsule. Values obtained using AFM on cynomolgus monkey lenses are similar to published values obtained using dynamic mechanical analysis on young human lenses. Molecular Vision 2007-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2649306/ /pubmed/17417612 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ziebarth, Noël M.
Wojcikiewicz, Ewa P.
Manns, Fabrice
Moy, Vincent T.
Parel, Jean-Marie
Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes
title Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes
title_full Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes
title_fullStr Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes
title_full_unstemmed Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes
title_short Atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes
title_sort atomic force microscopy measurements of lens elasticity in monkey eyes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2649306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17417612
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