“…Biomechanical measurements using whole-cell deformation approaches, such as micropipette aspiration (Key and Robinson, 2013), optical tweezers (Ekpenyong et al, 2012), substrate stretching (Bartalena et al, 2011) or the microplate stretcher (Hoffman and Crocker, 2009), yield global easy-tointerpret single-cell measurements of biomechanical stiffness; however, such methods require detaching otherwise adherent cells or placing cells on a less biologically relevant substrate. Furthermore, techniques such as atomic force microscopy (AFM) (Haase and Pelling, 2015) and magnetic twisting cytometry (Massiera et al, 2007) utilize nano-sized physical probes to acquire biomechanical readings at subcellular regions of interest, acquiring information of superior spatial resolution; at this scale, however, intracellular non-uniformity causes considerable variability in measured biomechanical responses, exacerbating the already present heterogeneity in many cell populations.…”