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      Molecular Mechanisms of Cellular Mechanosensing

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          Abstract

          Mechanical forces direct a host of cellular and tissue processes. Although much emphasis has been placed on cell-adhesion complexes as force sensors, the forces must nevertheless be transmitted through the cortical cytoskeleton. Yet how the actin cortex senses and transmits forces and how cytoskeletal proteins interact in response to the forces is poorly understood. Here, by combining molecular and mechanical experimental perturbations with theoretical multi-scale modeling, we decipher cortical mechanosensing from molecular to cellular scales. We show that forces are shared between myosin II and different actin crosslinkers, with myosin having potentiating or inhibitory effects on certain crosslinkers. Different types of cell deformations elicit distinct responses, with myosin and α-actinin responding to dilation, and filamin mainly reacting to shear. Our observations show that the accumulation kinetics of each protein may be explained by its molecular mechanisms, and that protein accumulation and the cell's viscoelastic state can explain cell contraction against mechanical load.

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          Most cited references41

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          Balancing forces: architectural control of mechanotransduction.

          All cells exist within the context of a three-dimensional microenvironment in which they are exposed to mechanical and physical cues. These cues can be disrupted through perturbations to mechanotransduction, from the nanoscale-level to the tissue-level, which compromises tensional homeostasis to promote pathologies such as cardiovascular disease and cancer. The mechanisms of such perturbations suggest that a complex interplay exists between the extracellular microenvironment and cellular function. Furthermore, sustained disruptions in tensional homeostasis can be caused by alterations in the extracellular matrix, allowing it to serve as a mechanically based memory-storage device that can perpetuate a disease or restore normal tissue behaviour.
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            Stress fibers are generated by two distinct actin assembly mechanisms in motile cells

            Stress fibers play a central role in adhesion, motility, and morphogenesis of eukaryotic cells, but the mechanism of how these and other contractile actomyosin structures are generated is not known. By analyzing stress fiber assembly pathways using live cell microscopy, we revealed that these structures are generated by two distinct mechanisms. Dorsal stress fibers, which are connected to the substrate via a focal adhesion at one end, are assembled through formin (mDia1/DRF1)–driven actin polymerization at focal adhesions. In contrast, transverse arcs, which are not directly anchored to substrate, are generated by endwise annealing of myosin bundles and Arp2/3-nucleated actin bundles at the lamella. Remarkably, dorsal stress fibers and transverse arcs can be converted to ventral stress fibers anchored to focal adhesions at both ends. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching analysis revealed that actin filament cross-linking in stress fibers is highly dynamic, suggesting that the rapid association–dissociation kinetics of cross-linkers may be essential for the formation and contractility of stress fibers. Based on these data, we propose a general model for assembly and maintenance of contractile actin structures in cells.
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              Probing the relation between force--lifetime--and chemistry in single molecular bonds.

              E. Evans (2001)
              On laboratory time scales, the energy landscape of a weak bond along a dissociation pathway is fully explored through Brownian-thermal excitations, and energy barriers become encoded in a dissociation time that varies with applied force. Probed with ramps of force over an enormous range of rates (force/time), this kinetic profile is transformed into a dynamic spectrum of bond rupture force as a function of loading rate. On a logarithmic scale in loading rate, the force spectrum provides an easy-to-read map of the prominent energy barriers traversed along the force-driven pathway and exposes the differences in energy between barriers. In this way, the method of dynamic force spectroscopy (DFS) is being used to probe the complex relation between force-lifetime-and chemistry in single molecular bonds. Most important, DFS probes the inner world of molecular interactions to reveal barriers that are difficult or impossible to detect in assays of near equilibrium dissociation but that determine bond lifetime and strength under rapid detachment. To use an ultrasensitive force probe as a spectroscopic tool, we need to understand the physics of bond dissociation under force, the impact of experimental technique on the measurement of detachment force (bond strength), the consequences of complex interactions in macromolecular bonds, and effects of multiply-bonded attachments.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101155473
                30248
                Nat Mater
                Nat Mater
                Nature materials
                1476-1122
                31 October 2013
                20 October 2013
                November 2013
                01 May 2014
                : 12
                : 11
                : 10.1038/nmat3772
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Cell Biology, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA
                [2 ]Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Science, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA
                [3 ]Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Whiting School of Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21218, USA
                [4 ]Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Whiting School of Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21218, USA
                Author notes
                Article
                NIHMS521580
                10.1038/nmat3772
                3838893
                24141449
                152305b3-a9c4-41bf-968c-524a26d4b119

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                History
                Funding
                Funded by: National Institute of General Medical Sciences : NIGMS
                Award ID: R01 GM086704 || GM
                Funded by: National Institute of General Medical Sciences : NIGMS
                Award ID: R01 GM066817 || GM
                Categories
                Article

                Materials science
                Materials science

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