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Dive into the research topics where Pascal Behr is active.

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Featured researches published by Pascal Behr.


Nano Letters | 2009

FluidFM: Combining Atomic Force Microscopy and Nanofluidics in a Universal Liquid Delivery System for Single Cell Applications and Beyond

André Meister; Michael Gabi; Pascal Behr; Philipp Studer; Janos Vörös; Philippe Niedermann; Joanna Bitterli; Jérôme Polesel-Maris; Martha Liley; Harry Heinzelmann; Tomaso Zambelli

We describe the fluidFM, an atomic force microscope (AFM) based on hollow cantilevers for local liquid dispensing and stimulation of single living cells under physiological conditions. A nanofluidic channel in the cantilever allows soluble molecules to be dispensed through a submicrometer aperture in the AFM tip. The sensitive AFM force feedback allows controlled approach of the tip to a sample for extremely local modification of surfaces in liquid environments. It also allows reliable discrimination between gentle contact with a cell membrane or its perforation. Using these two procedures, dyes have been introduced into individual living cells and even selected subcellular structures of these cells. The universality and versatility of the fluidFM will stimulate original experiments at the submicrometer scale not only in biology but also in physics, chemistry, and material science.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Force-controlled spatial manipulation of viable mammalian cells and micro-organisms by means of FluidFM technology

Pablo Dörig; Philipp Stiefel; Pascal Behr; Edin Sarajlic; Daniel Bijl; Michael Gabi; Janos Vörös; Julia A. Vorholt; Tomaso Zambelli

The FluidFM technology uses microchanneled atomic force microscope cantilevers that are fixed to a drilled atomic force microscope cantilevers probeholder. A continuous fluidic circuit is thereby achieved extending from an external liquid reservoir, through the probeholder and the hollow cantilever to the tip aperture. In this way, both overpressure and an underpressure can be applied to the liquid reservoir and hence to the built-in fluidic circuit. We describe in this letter how standard atomic force microscopy in combination with regulated pressure differences inside the microchanneled cantilevers can be used to displace living organisms with micrometric precision in a nondestructive way. The protocol is applicable to both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells (e.g., mammalian cells, yeasts, and bacteria) in physiological buffer. By means of this procedure, cells can also be transferred from one glass slide to another one or onto an agar medium.


Nano Letters | 2012

Cooperative vaccinia infection demonstrated at the single-cell level using FluidFM.

Philipp Stiefel; Florian I. Schmidt; Pablo Dörig; Pascal Behr; Tomaso Zambelli; Julia A. Vorholt; Jason Mercer

The mechanisms used by viruses to enter and replicate within host cells are subjects of intense investigation. These studies are ultimately aimed at development of new drugs that interfere with these processes. Virus entry and infection are generally monitored by dispensing bulk virus suspensions on layers of cells without accounting for the fate of each virion. Here, we take advantage of the recently developed FluidFM to deposit single vaccinia virions onto individual cells in a controlled manner. While the majority of virions were blocked prior to early gene expression, infection of individual cells increased in a nondeterministic fashion with respect to the number of viruses placed. Microscopic analyses of several stages of the virus lifecycle indicated that this was the result of cooperativity between virions during early stages of infection. These findings highlight the importance of performing controlled virus infection experiments at the single cell level.


Nano Letters | 2015

Force-controlled patch clamp of beating cardiac cells.

Dario Ossola; Mohamed Yassine Amarouch; Pascal Behr; Janos Vörös; Hugues Abriel; Tomaso Zambelli

From its invention in the 1970s, the patch clamp technique is the gold standard in electrophysiology research and drug screening because it is the only tool enabling accurate investigation of voltage-gated ion channels, which are responsible for action potentials. Because of its key role in drug screening, innovation efforts are being made to reduce its complexity toward more automated systems. While some of these new approaches are being adopted in pharmaceutical companies, conventional patch-clamp remains unmatched in fundamental research due to its versatility. Here, we merged the patch clamp and atomic force microscope (AFM) techniques, thus equipping the patch-clamp with the sensitive AFM force control. This was possible using the FluidFM, a force-controlled nanopipette based on microchanneled AFM cantilevers. First, the compatibility of the system with patch-clamp electronics and its ability to record the activity of voltage-gated ion channels in whole-cell configuration was demonstrated with sodium (NaV1.5) channels. Second, we showed the feasibility of simultaneous recording of membrane current and force development during contraction of isolated cardiomyocytes. Force feedback allowed for a gentle and stable contact between AFM tip and cell membrane enabling serial patch clamping and injection without apparent cell damage.


Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering | 2016

SU-8 hollow cantilevers for AFM cell adhesion studies

Vincent Martinez; Pascal Behr; Ute Drechsler; Jérôme Polesel-Maris; Eva Potthoff; Janos Vörös; Tomaso Zambelli

A novel fabrication method was established to produce flexible, transparent, and robust tipless hollow atomic force microscopy (AFM) cantilevers made entirely from SU-8. Channels of 3 μm thickness and several millimeters length were integrated into 12 μm thick and 40 μm wide cantilevers. Connected to a pressure controller, the devices showed high sealing performance with no leakage up to 6 bars. Changing the cantilever lengths from 100 μm to 500 μm among the same wafer allowed the targeting of various spring constants ranging from 0.5 to 80 N m−1 within a single fabrication run. These hollow polymeric AFM cantilevers were operated in the optical beam deflection configuration. To demonstrate the performance of the device, single-cell force spectroscopy experiments were performed with a single probe detaching in a serial protocol more than 100 Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast cells from plain glass and glass coated with polydopamine while measuring adhesion forces in the sub-nanoNewton range. SU-8 now offers a new alternative to conventional silicon-based hollow cantilevers with more flexibility in terms of complex geometric design and surface chemistry modification.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Simultaneous Scanning Ion Conductance Microscopy and Atomic Force Microscopy with Microchanneled Cantilevers.

Dario Ossola; Livie Dorwling-Carter; Harald Dermutz; Pascal Behr; Janos Vörös; Tomaso Zambelli

We combined scanning ion conductance microscopy (SICM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) into a single tool using AFM cantilevers with an embedded microchannel flowing into the nanosized aperture at the apex of the hollow pyramid. An electrode was positioned in the AFM fluidic circuit connected to a second electrode in the bath. We could thus simultaneously measure the ionic current and the cantilever bending (in optical beam deflection mode). First, we quantitatively compared the SICM and AFM contact points on the approach curves. Second, we estimated where the probe in SICM mode touches the sample during scanning on a calibration grid and applied the finding to image a network of neurites on a Petri dish. Finally, we assessed the feasibility of a double controller using both the ionic current and the deflection as input signals of the piezofeedback. The experimental data were rationalized in the framework of finite elements simulations.


Microelectronic Engineering | 2009

Nanoscale dispensing in liquid environment of streptavidin on a biotin-functionalized surface using hollow atomic force microscopy probes

André Meister; Jérôme Polesel-Maris; Philippe Niedermann; Joanna Przybylska; Philipp Studer; Michael Gabi; Pascal Behr; Tomaso Zambelli; Martha Liley; Janos Vörös; Harry Heinzelmann


Archive | 2009

Probe arrangement for exchanging in a controllable way liquids with micro-sized samples of material like biological cells

Michael Gabi; Janos Vörös; Tomaso Zambelli; Pascal Behr


Archive | 2011

Method for spatially manipulating a microscopic object and device for conducting said method

Michael Gabi; Janos Voeroes; Stefan Pablo Doerig; Pascal Behr; Phillipp Stiefel; Thomaso Zambelli; Julia Vorholt-Zambelli


Archive | 2009

NADIS: A Novel AFM-based Tool for Dispensing Fluids into Single Cells

Harry Heinzelmann; André Meister; Philippe Niedermann; Joanna Bitterli; Jérôme Polesel-Maris; Martha Liley; Pascal Behr; Philipp Studer; Janos Vörös; Tomaso Zambelli

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Jérôme Polesel-Maris

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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André Meister

Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology

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Harry Heinzelmann

Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology

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Martha Liley

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Philipp Studer

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Philippe Niedermann

Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology

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