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1.
Filopodia, or the growth of bundles of biological fibers outwards from a biological cell surface while enclosed in a membrane tube, are implicated in many processes vital to life. This study models the effect of capping protein on such filopodia, paying close attention to the polymerization dynamics of biological fiber bundles within long membrane tubes. Due to the effects of capping protein, the number of fibers in the filopodium bundle decreases down the length of the enclosing membrane tube. This decrease in the number of fibers down the length of a growing filopodium is found to have profound implications for the dynamics and stability of filopodia in general. This study theoretically finds that the presence of even a relatively modest amount of capping protein can have a large effect on the growth of typical filopodia, such as can be found in fibroblasts, keratocytes, and neuronal growth cones. As an illustration of this modeling work, this study investigates the striking example of the acrosomal reaction in the sea cucumber Thyone, whose filopodia can grow remarkably quickly to ∼90 μm in ∼10 s, and where the number of fibers is known to decrease down the length of the filopodium, presumably due to progressive fiber end-capping occurring as the filopodium grows. Realistic future dynamical theories for filopodium growth are likely to rely on an accurate treatment of the kinds of capping protein effects analyzed in this work.  相似文献   

2.
Motile cells explore their surrounding milieu by extending thin dynamic protrusions, or filopodia. The growth of filopodia is driven by actin filament bundles that polymerize underneath the cell membrane. We compute the mechanical and dynamical features of the protrusion growth process by explicitly incorporating the flexible plasma membrane. We find that a critical number of filaments are needed to generate net filopodial growth. Without external influences, the filopodium can extend indefinitely up to the buckling length of the F-actin bundle. Dynamical calculations show that the protrusion speed is enhanced by the thermal fluctuations of the membrane; a filament bundle encased in a flexible membrane grows much faster. The protrusion speed depends directly on the number and spatial arrangement of the filaments in the bundle and whether the filaments are tethered to the membrane. Filopodia also attract each other through distortions of the membrane. Spatially close filopodia will merge to form a larger one. Force-velocity relationships mimicking micromanipulation experiments testing our predictions are computed.  相似文献   

3.
BackgroundFilopodia are actin-rich membrane protrusions that play instrumental roles in development, cell migration, pathogen detection, and wound healing. During neurogenesis, filopodium formation precedes the formation of dendrites and spines. The insulin receptor substrate protein of 53 kDa (IRSp53) has been implicated in regulating the formation of filopodia. Our previous results suggest that a signaling adaptor protein SH2B1β is required for neurite outgrowth of hippocampal neurons and neurite initiation of PC12 cells. Thus, we hypothesize that IRSp53 and SH2B1β may act together to regulate filopodium formation.MethodsTo determine the contribution of IRSp53 and SH2B1β in the formation of filopodia, we transiently transfect IRSp53 and/or SH2B1β to 293T cells. Cell morphology and protein distribution are assessed via confocal microscopy and subcellular fractionation. Total numbers of filopodia and filopodium numbers per perimeter are calculated to show the relative contribution of IRSp53 and SH2B1β.ResultsIn this study, we show that SH2B1β interacts with IRSp53 and increases the number of IRSp53-induced filopodia. One mechanism for this enhancement is that IRSp53 recruits SH2B1β to the plasma membrane to actively promote membrane protrusion. The increased numbers of filopodia likely result from SH2B1-mediated cytoplasmic extension and thus increased cell perimeter as well as IRSp53-mediated filopodium formation.ConclusionsTaken together, this study provides a novel finding that SH2B1β interacts with IRSp53-containing complexes to increase the number of filopodia.General significanceA better understanding of how SH2B1β and IRSp53 promote filopodium formation may have clinical implication in neurogenesis and regeneration.  相似文献   

4.
In migrating fibroblasts actomyosin II bundles are graded polarity (GP) bundles, a distinct organization to stress fibers. GP bundles are important for powering cell migration, yet have an unknown mechanism of formation. Electron microscopy and the fate of photobleached marks show actin filaments undergoing retrograde flow in filopodia, and the lamellipodium are structurally and dynamically linked with stationary GP bundles within the lamella. An individual filopodium initially protrudes, but then becomes separated from the tip of the lamellipodium and seeds the formation of a new GP bundle within the lamella. In individual live cells expressing both GFP-myosin II and RFP-actin, myosin II puncta localize to the base of an individual filopodium an average 28 s before the filopodium seeds the formation of a new GP bundle. Associated myosin II is stationary with respect to the substratum in new GP bundles. Inhibition of myosin II motor activity in live cells blocks appearance of new GP bundles in the lamella, without inhibition of cell protrusion in the same timescale. We conclude retrograde F-actin flow and myosin II activity within the leading cell edge delivers F-actin to the lamella to seed the formation of new GP bundles.  相似文献   

5.
RhoE Regulates Actin Cytoskeleton Organization and Cell Migration   总被引:20,自引:4,他引:16       下载免费PDF全文
The actin cytoskeleton is regulated by Rho family proteins: in fibroblasts, Rho mediates the formation of actin stress fibers, whereas Rac regulates lamellipodium formation and Cdc42 controls filopodium formation. We have cloned the mouse RhoE gene, whose product is a member of the Rho family that shares (except in one amino acid) the conserved effector domain of RhoA, RhoB, and RhoC. RhoE is able to bind GTP but does not detectably bind GDP and has low intrinsic GTPase activity compared with Rac. The role of RhoE in regulating actin organization was investigated by microinjection in Bac1.2F5 macrophages and MDCK cells. In macrophages, RhoE induced actin reorganization, leading to the formation of extensions resembling filopodia and pseudopodia. In MDCK cells, RhoE induced the complete disappearance of stress fibers, together with cell spreading. However, RhoE did not detectably affect the actin bundles that run parallel to the outer membranes of cells at the periphery of colonies, which are known to be dependent on RhoA. In addition, RhoE induced an increase in the speed of migration of hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor-stimulated MDCK cells, in contrast to the previously reported inhibition produced by activated RhoA. The subcellular localization of RhoE at the lateral membranes of MDCK cells suggests a role in cell-cell adhesion, as has been shown for RhoA. These results suggest that RhoE may act to inhibit signalling downstream of RhoA, altering some RhoA-regulated responses, such as stress fiber formation, but not affecting others, such as peripheral actin bundle formation.  相似文献   

6.
Assemblies of actin and its regulators underlie the dynamic morphology of all eukaryotic cells. To understand how actin regulatory proteins work together to generate actin-rich structures such as filopodia, we analyzed the localization of diverse actin regulators within filopodia in Drosophila embryos and in a complementary in vitro system of filopodia-like structures (FLSs). We found that the composition of the regulatory protein complex where actin is incorporated (the filopodial tip complex) is remarkably heterogeneous both in vivo and in vitro. Our data reveal that different pairs of proteins correlate with each other and with actin bundle length, suggesting the presence of functional subcomplexes. This is consistent with a theoretical framework where three or more redundant subcomplexes join the tip complex stochastically, with any two being sufficient to drive filopodia formation. We provide an explanation for the observed heterogeneity and suggest that a mechanism based on multiple components allows stereotypical filopodial dynamics to arise from diverse upstream signaling pathways.  相似文献   

7.
SH2B1 is an adaptor protein known to enhance neurite outgrowth. In this study, we provide evidence suggesting that the SH2B1 level is increased during in vitro culture of hippocampal neurons, and the β isoform (SH2B1β) is the predominant isoform. The fact that formation of filopodia is prerequisite for neurite initiation suggests that SH2B1 may regulate filopodium formation and thus neurite initiation. To investigate whether SH2B1 may regulate filopodium formation, the effect of SH2B1 and a membrane and actin regulator, IRSp53 (insulin receptor tyrosine kinase substrate p53), is investigated. Overexpressing both SH2B1β and IRSp53 significantly enhances filopodium formation, neurite outgrowth, and branching. Both in vivo and in vitro data show that SH2B1 interacts with IRSp53 in hippocampal neurons. This interaction depends on the N-terminal proline-rich domains of SH2B1. In addition, SH2B1 and IRSp53 co-localize at the plasma membrane, and their levels increase in the Triton X-100-insoluble fraction of developing neurons. These findings suggest that SH2B1-IRSp53 complexes promote the formation of filopodia, neurite initiation, and neuronal branching.  相似文献   

8.
Thomas S  Popov VL  Walker DH 《PloS one》2010,5(12):e15775

Background

The obligately intracellular bacterium Ehrlichia chaffeensis that resides in mononuclear phagocytes is the causative agent of human monocytotropic ehrlichiosis. Ehrlichia muris and Ixodes ovatus Ehrlichia (IOE) are agents of mouse models of ehrlichiosis. The mechanism by which Ehrlichia are transported from an infected host cell to a non-infected cell has not been demonstrated.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Using fluorescence microscopy and transmission and scanning electron microscopy, we demonstrated that Ehrlichia was transported through the filopodia of macrophages during early stages of infection. If host cells were not present in the vicinity of an Ehrlichia-infected cell, the leading edge of the filopodium formed a fan-shaped structure filled with the pathogen. Formation of filopodia in the host macrophages was inhibited by cytochalasin D and ehrlichial transport were prevented due to the absence of filopodia formation. At late stages of infection the host cell membrane was ruptured, and the bacteria were released.

Conclusions/Significance

Ehrlichia are transported through the host cell filopodium during initial stages of infection, but are released by host cell membrane rupture during later stages of infection.  相似文献   

9.
Myosin 10 is an actin-based molecular motor that localizes to the tips of filopodia in mammalian cells. To understand how it is targeted to this distinct region of the cell, we have used total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to study the movement of individual full-length and truncated GFP-tagged molecules. Truncation mutants lacking the motor region failed to localize to filopodial tips but still bound transiently at the plasma membrane. Deletion of the single α-helical and anti-parallel coiled-coil forming regions, which lie between the motor and pleckstrin homology domains, reduced the instantaneous velocity of intrafilopodial movement but did not affect the number of substrate adherent filopodia. Deletion of the anti-parallel coiled-coil forming region, but not the EKR-rich region of the single α-helical domain, restored intrafilopodial trafficking, suggesting this region is important in determining myosin 10 motility. We propose a model by which myosin 10 rapidly targets to the filopodial tip via a sequential reduction in dimensionality. Molecules first undergo rapid diffusion within the three-dimensional volume of the cell body. They then exhibit periods of slower two-dimensional diffusion in the plane of the plasma membrane. Finally, they move in a unidimensional, highly directed manner along the polarized actin filament bundle within the filopodium becoming confined to a single point at the tip. Here we have observed directly each phase of the trafficking process using single molecule fluorescence imaging of live cells and have quantified our observations using single particle tracking, autocorrelation analysis, and kymographs.  相似文献   

10.
Filopodia are cellular protrusions important for axon guidance, embryonic development, and wound healing. The Rho GTPase Cdc42 is the best studied inducer of filopodium formation, and several of its effectors and their interacting partners have been linked to the process. These include IRSp53, N-WASP, Mena, and Eps8. The Rho GTPase, Rif, also drives filopodium formation. The signaling pathway by which Rif induces filopodia is poorly understood, with mDia2 being the only protein implicated to date. It is thus not clear how distinct the Rif-driven pathway for filopodium formation is from the one mediated by Cdc42. In this study, we characterize the dynamics of Rif-induced filopodia by time lapse imaging of live neuronal cells and show that Rif drives filopodium formation via an independent pathway that does not involve the Cdc42 effectors N-WASP and IRSp53, the IRSp53 binding partner Mena, or the Rac effectors WAVE1 and WAVE2. Rif formed filopodia in the absence of N-WASP or Mena and when IRSp53, WAVE1, or WAVE2 was knocked down by RNAi. Rif-mediated filopodial protrusion was instead reduced by silencing mDia1 expression or overexpressing a dominant negative mutant of mDia1. mDia1 on its own was able to form filopodia. Data from acceptor photobleaching FRET studies of protein-protein interaction demonstrate that Rif interacts directly with mDia1 in filopodia but not with mDia2. Taken together, these results suggest a novel pathway for filopodia formation via Rif and mDia1.  相似文献   

11.
《Biophysical journal》2022,121(17):3224-3241
Macrophages use filopodia to withdraw particles toward the cell body for phagocytosis. This can require substantial forces, which the cell generates after bio-mechanical stimuli are transmitted to the filopodium. Adaptation mechanisms to mechanical stimuli are essential for cells, but can a cell iteratively improve filopodia pulling? If so, the underlying mechanic adaptation principles organized on the protein level are unclear. Here, we tackle this problem using optically trapped 1 μm beads, which we tracked interferometrically at 1 MHz during connection to the tips of dorsal filopodia of macrophages. We observe repetitive failures while the filopodium tries to pull the bead out of the optical trap. Analyses of mean bead motions and position fluctuations on the nano-meter and microsecond scale indicate mechanical ruptures caused by a force-dependent actin-membrane connection. We found that beads are retracted three times slower under any load between 5 and 40 pN relative to the no-load transport, which has the same speed as the actin retrograde flow obtained from fluorescent speckle tracking. From this duty ratio of pulling velocities, we estimated a continuous on/off binding with τoff = 2?τon, with measured off times τoff = 0.1–0.5 s. Remarkably, we see a gradual increase of filopodia pulling forces from 10 to 30 pN over time and after failures, which points toward an unknown adaptation mechanism. Additionally, we see that the attachment strength and friction between the bead and filopodium tip increases under load and over time. All observations are typical for catch-bond proteins such as integrin-talin complexes. We present a mechanistic picture of adaptive mechanotransduction, which formed by the help of mathematical models for repetitive tip ruptures and reconnections. The analytic mathematical model and the stochastic computer simulations, both based on catch-bond lifetimes, confirmed our measurements. Such catch-bond characteristics could also be important for other immune cells taking up counteracting pathogens.  相似文献   

12.
The extension and retraction of filopodia in response to extracellular cues is thought to be an important initial step that determines the direction of growth cone advance. We sought to understand how the dynamic behavior of the actin cytoskeleton is regulated to produce extension or retraction. By observing the movement of fiduciary marks on actin filaments in growth cones of a neuroblastoma cell line, we found that filopodium extension and retraction are governed by a balance between the rate of actin cytoskeleton assembly at the tip and retrograde flow. Both assembly and flow rate can vary with time in a single filopodium and between filopodia in a single growth cone. Regulation of assembly rate is the dominant factor in controlling filopodia behavior in our system.  相似文献   

13.
《Biophysical journal》2020,118(1):182-192
Bundles of actin filaments are central to a large variety of cellular structures such as filopodia, stress fibers, cytokinetic rings, and focal adhesions. The mechanical properties of these bundles are critical for proper force transmission and force bearing. Previous mathematical modeling efforts have focused on bundles’ rigidity and shape. However, it remains unknown how bundle length and buckling are controlled by external physical factors. In this work, we present a biophysical model for dynamic bundles of actin filaments submitted to an external load. In combination with in vitro motility assays of beads coated with formins, our model allowed us to characterize conditions for bead movement and bundle buckling. From the deformation profiles, we determined key biophysical properties of tethered actin bundles such as their rigidity and filament density.  相似文献   

14.
15.
We present a picture of filopodial growth and retraction from physics perspective, where we emphasize the significance of the role played by protein fluxes due to spatially extended nature of the filopodium. We review a series of works, which used stochastic simulations and mean field analytical modeling to find the concentration profile of G-actin inside a filopodium, which, in turn, determines the stationary filopodial length. In addition to extensively reviewing the prior works, we also report some new results on the role of active transport in regulating the length of filopodia. We model a filopodium where delivery of actin monomers toward the tip can occur both through passive diffusion and active transport by myosin motors. We found that the concentration profile of G-actin along the filopodium is rather non-trivial, containing a narrow minimum near the base followed by a broad maximum. For efficient enough actin transport, this non-monotonous shape is expected to occur under a broad set of conditions. We also raise the issue of slow approach to the stationary length and the possibility of multiple steady-state solutions.Key words: filopodia, active transport, molecular motors, stochastic process, mean-field theory  相似文献   

16.
Muscles exhibit highly complex, multi-scale architecture with thousands of muscle fibers, each with different properties, interacting with each other and surrounding connective structures. Consequently, the results of single-fiber experiments are scarcely linked to the macroscopic or whole muscle behavior. This is especially true for human muscles where it would be important to understand of how skeletal muscles disorders affect patients’ life. In this work, we developed a mathematical model to study how fast and slow muscle fibers, well characterized in single-fiber experiments, work and generate together force and displacement in muscle bundles. We characterized the parameters of a Hill-type model, using experimental data on fast and slow single human muscle fibers, and comparing experimental data with numerical simulations obtained from finite element (FE) models of single fibers. Then, we developed a FE model of a bundle of 19 fibers, based on an immunohistochemically stained cross section of human diaphragm and including the corresponding properties of each slow or fast fiber. Simulations of isotonic contractions of the bundle model allowed the generation of its apparent force–velocity relationship. Although close to the average of the force–velocity curves of fast and slow fibers, the bundle curve deviates substantially toward the fast fibers at low loads. We believe that the present model and the characterization of the force–velocity curve of a fiber bundle represents the starting point to link the single-fiber properties to those of whole muscle with FE application in phenomenological models of human muscles.  相似文献   

17.
The major sperm protein (MSP) motility system in nematode sperm is best known for propelling the movement of mature sperm, where it has taken over the role usually played by actin in amoeboid cell motility. However, MSP filaments also drive the extension of filopodia, transient organelles composed of a core bundle of MSP filaments, that form in the late in sperm development but are not found on crawling cells. We have reconstituted filopodial extension in vitro whereby thin bundles of MSP filaments, each enveloped by a membrane sheath at their growing end, elongated at rates up to 17 microm/min. These bundles often exceeded 500 microm in length but were comprised of filaments only 1 microm long. The reconstituted filopodia assembled in the same cell-free sperm extracts that produced MSP fibers, robust meshworks of filaments that exhibit the same organization and dynamics as the lamellipodial filament system that propels sperm movement. The filopodia and fibers that assembled in vitro both had a membranous structure at their growing end, shared four MSP accessory proteins, and responded identically to agents that alter MSP-based motility by modulating protein phosphorylation. However, filopodia grew three- to four-fold faster than fibers. The reconstitution of filopodial extension shows that, like the actin cytoskeleton, MSP filaments can adopt two architectures, bundles and meshworks, each capable of pushing against membranes to generate protrusion. The reconstitution of both forms of motility in the same in vitro system provides a promising avenue for understanding how the forces for membrane protrusion are produced.  相似文献   

18.
The molecular layer of the cerebellum contains parallel fibers, the axons of granule neurons. We have examined the morphology and behavior of parallel fiber growth cones in the early postnatal rat cerebellum using the fluorescent tracer DiI. Parallel fiber growth cones distributed into three categories based on size and shape: short torpedo-like, long torpedo-like, and lamellopodial in form. The torpedo-like growth cones were modified by the addition of lamellopodia and/or filopodia, and the lamellopodial growth cones were often decorated with a filopodium. These three different growth cone morphologies were found throughout the growing region of the molecular layer. The nascent axons elaborated by premigratory granule neurons differed from the longer axons of more developed neurons in that they often had forked growth cones and extensive lamellopodial decoration along the axon shaft. Growth cones in living slices closely resembled those observed in the fixed preparations. The living growth cones exhibited frequent lamellopodial rearrangement and a side-to-side head-waving movement. The axon proximal to the growth cone was also dynamic. The axons curved and undulated, and mobile swellings formed along the axon shaft. These observations show that the growth cones of parallel fibers are similar to growth cones described for axons in other developing systems in terms of size, morphological characteristics, and dynamic behavior. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 36: 91–104, 1998  相似文献   

19.
The biological function of filopodia has been extensively studied while only little work has been done on their mechanical properties. In the present study, we apply magnetic microbeads to explore the capturing and initial step of phagocytosis of pathogens by macrophages through filopodia. Microbeads were covered by the bacterial coat protein invasin which is known to trigger the invasion of the intestine by the bacteria Yersinia enterocolitica. These mimetics of bacteria were placed in the vicinity of J774 mouse macrophages exhibiting long filopodia. The specific adhesion of beads to the tip of a filopodium induced the retraction of the protrusion resulting in the dragging of the bead towards the cell body. The dynamics of the retraction process was analyzed by following the in-plane motion of the bead. We estimated the minimal force developed by filopodia and compared the results with previous magnetic tweezer studies of mechanical force induced growth of protrusions (Vonna et al. 2003). We show that very thin filopodia can generate astonishingly large retraction forces over large distances (>10 μm) and can act as an efficient mechanical tool to detach pathogens adhering on surfaces.  相似文献   

20.
Drebrin is a cytoskeleton‐associated protein which can interact with both actin filaments and the tips of microtubules. Its roles have been studied mostly in dendrites, and the functions of drebrin in axons are less well understood. In this study, we analyzed the role of drebrin, through shRNA‐mediated depletion and overexpression, in the collateral branching of chicken embryonic sensory axons. We report that drebrin promotes the formation of axonal filopodia and collateral branches in vivo and in vitro. Live imaging of cytoskeletal dynamics revealed that drebrin promotes the formation of filopodia from precursor structures termed axonal actin patches. Endogenous drebrin localizes to actin patches and depletion studies indicate that drebrin contributes to the development of patches. In filopodia, endogenous drebrin localizes to the proximal portion of the filopodium. Drebrin was found to promote the stability of axonal filopodia and the entry of microtubule plus tips into axonal filopodia. The effects of drebrin on the stabilization of filopodia are independent of its effects on promoting microtubule targeting to filopodia. Inhibition of myosin II induces a redistribution of endogenous drebrin distally into filopodia, and further increases branching in drebrin overexpressing neurons. Finally, a 30 min treatment with the branch‐inducing signal nerve growth factor increases the levels of axonal drebrin. This study determines the specific roles of drebrin in the regulation of the axonal cytoskeleton, and provides evidence that drebrin contributes to the coordination of the actin and microtubule cytoskeleton during the initial stages of axon branching. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 76: 1092–1110, 2016  相似文献   

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