“…Indeed, AFM based force spectroscopy is increasingly used to study the mechanisms of molecular recognition and protein folding/unfolding, to probe chemical groups and dynamics of receptor-ligand interactions (Florin et al 1994;Dorobantu and Gray, 2010;Rico et al, 2011), and to study the local elasticity (Clausen-Schaumann et al, 2000) and the mechanical properties of soft biological samples (Butt et al, 2005;Müller and Dufrene, 2008). The AFM has also provided nanometer-scale resolution imaging of biological samples ranging from single molecules, such as DNA (Hamon et al, 2007), to intact cells attached on biomaterials (Berquand et al, 2010). Emerging applications include increasing the resolution of mechanical measurements in biological contexts such as cell division (Gilbert et al, 2007;Stewart et al, 2011) or cell adhesion (Li et al, 2003;Fierro et al, 2008).…”