“…Quantifying and rationalizing the mechanics of proteins at various hierarchical scales is critical in fields including biomaterials design ( Wu et al, 2018 ; Sorushanova et al, 2019 ), neurodegeneration ( Yu et al, 2013 ), active matter ( Koenderink et al, 2009 ; Lansky et al, 2015 ; Weirich et al, 2019 ; Gompper et al, 2020 ), cellular biology – including the rapidly developing field of liquid-liquid phase separation ( Bergeron-Sandoval et al, 2018 ; Jawerth et al, 2018 ; Kaur et al, 2019 ; Shayegan et al, 2019 ; Alshareedah et al, 2020 ), and mechanobiology ( Burla et al, 2019 ; Mathieu and Manneville, 2019 ). Optical tweezers are well suited to probing protein mechanics at scales ranging from single molecules to fibers to networks, and, with the integration of complementary measurement modalities, will continue to deliver new insight into the mechanisms by which mechanical responsiveness is imparted by proteins.…”