One of the first steps in immune response involves the slowdown of white blood cells flowing with the blood stream for then firmly adhere to the vascular wall and crawl to reach the site of injury or inflammation. During this process, the blood flow and active force generation by the cells result in important mechanical forces that deform the cells and break individual adhesion linkages between them. These forces are generated at different time scales, from very short to very long lapses of time. Thus, knowing the forces involved during the different steps is essential to better understand this process. However, measurement of forces on cells at the small length scales of the cell and covering all the range of time scales requires development of new nanotools: instruments working at the nanometer scale. The aim of this project is to develop new nanotools to understand the physics behind white blood cells activity. The outcomes will establish novel nanotools applicable to understand other essential processes such as virus-cell binding. Moreover, it will provide fundamental understanding of the immune response, which may lead to better diagnosis and treatment of disease.