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1.
Recognition of external mechanical signals is vital for mammalian cells. Cyclic stretch, e.g. around blood vessels, is one such signal that induces cell reorientation from parallel to almost perpendicular to the direction of stretch. Here, we present quantitative analyses of both, cell and cytoskeletal reorientation of umbilical cord fibroblasts. Cyclic strain of preset amplitudes was applied at mHz frequencies. Elastomeric chambers were specifically designed and characterized to distinguish between zero strain and minimal stress directions and to allow accurate theoretical modeling. Reorientation was only induced when the applied stretch exceeded a specific amplitude, suggesting a non-linear response. However, on very soft substrates no mechanoresponse occurs even for high strain. For all stretch amplitudes, the angular distributions of reoriented cells are in very good agreement with a theory modeling stretched cells as active force dipoles. Cyclic stretch increases the number of stress fibers and the coupling to adhesions. We show that changes in cell shape follow cytoskeletal reorientation with a significant temporal delay. Our data identify the importance of environmental stiffness for cell reorientation, here in direction of zero strain. These in vitro experiments on cultured cells argue for the necessity of rather stiff environmental conditions to induce cellular reorientation in mammalian tissues.  相似文献   

2.
The elastic modulus of bioengineered materials has a strong influence on the phenotype of many cells including cardiomyocytes. On polyacrylamide (PAA) gels that are laminated with ligands for integrins, cardiac myocytes develop well organized sarcomeres only when cultured on substrates with elastic moduli in the range 10 kPa-30 kPa, near those of the healthy tissue. On stiffer substrates (>60 kPa) approximating the damaged heart, myocytes form stress fiber-like filament bundles but lack organized sarcomeres or an elongated shape. On soft (<1 kPa) PAA gels myocytes exhibit disorganized actin networks and sarcomeres. However, when the polyacrylamide matrix is replaced by hyaluronic acid (HA) as the gel network to which integrin ligands are attached, robust development of functional neonatal rat ventricular myocytes occurs on gels with elastic moduli of 200 Pa, a stiffness far below that of the neonatal heart and on which myocytes would be amorphous and dysfunctional when cultured on polyacrylamide-based gels. The HA matrix by itself is not adhesive for myocytes, and the myocyte phenotype depends on the type of integrin ligand that is incorporated within the HA gel, with fibronectin, gelatin, or fibrinogen being more effective than collagen I. These results show that HA alters the integrin-dependent stiffness response of cells in vitro and suggests that expression of HA within the extracellular matrix (ECM) in vivo might similarly alter the response of cells that bind the ECM through integrins. The integration of HA with integrin-specific ECM signaling proteins provides a rationale for engineering a new class of soft hybrid hydrogels that can be used in therapeutic strategies to reverse the remodeling of the injured myocardium.  相似文献   

3.
We report that cranin (dystroglycan) can become recruited to focal adhesions of cultured rat REF 52 fibroblasts and human aortic smooth muscle cells. Within mature focal adhesions, cranin was present within the plaque region defined by β1 integrin, vinculin and phosphotyrosine staining, but occupied a larger domain corresponding to, the terminal segments of stress fibers that was more precisely co-extensive with the cytoskeletal proteins alpha-actinin, utrophin and aciculin. When REF 52 fibroblasts were plated on different substrata in the absence of protein synthesis and secretion in serum-free medium, focal clusters of cranin readily formed within 2 hours on matrix proteins that bind cranin directly (laminin or agrin) which were maintained as the focal adhesions became mature. In contrast, cranin failed to become targeted to cell-substratum attachment sites, either at early or later times. when cells were plated on a variety of other substrata that elicit formation of focal adhesions but do not bind cranin directly (fibronectin, vitronectin, collagen type IV, or anti-β integrin antibody TS2/16). These data strongly suggest that targeting of cranin to focal adhesions was dependent upon the presence of an extracellular ligand capable of binding cranin directly. How-ever, some cultured nonmuscle cell lines (e.g., human umbilical vein endothelial cells, NIH 3T3 and CHO cells) failed to localize cranin to focal adhesions, even when plated on laminin. Cranin was also enriched at cell-cell adherens-type junctions of human normal breast MCF-10 epithelial cells, and at growth cones of E17 rat hippocampal axons. That cranin can become targeted to sites of cell-cell and cell-substratum contact in diverse cell types supports the hypothesis that cranin may be involved in mediating or regulating cell adhesion. The absence of muscle-specific and synapse-specific proteins within fibroblasts and epithelial cells provides a different context for thinking about cranin (dystroglycan) that may aid in discerning general principles of its structure and function.  相似文献   

4.
We report that cranin (dystroglycan) can become recruited to focal adhesions of cultured rat REF 52 fibroblasts and human aortic smooth muscle cells. Within mature focal adhesions, cranin was present within the plaque region defined by β1 integrin, vinculin and phosphotyrosine staining, but occupied a larger domain corresponding to, the terminal segments of stress fibers that was more precisely co-extensive with the cytoskeletal proteins alpha-actinin, utrophin and aciculin. When REF 52 fibroblasts were plated on different substrata in the absence of protein synthesis and secretion in serum-free medium, focal clusters of cranin readily formed within 2 hours on matrix proteins that bind cranin directly (laminin or agrin) which were maintained as the focal adhesions became mature. In contrast, cranin failed to become targeted to cell-substratum attachment sites, either at early or later times. when cells were plated on a variety of other substrata that elicit formation of focal adhesions but do not bind cranin directly (fibronectin, vitronectin, collagen type IV, or anti-β integrin antibody TS2/16). These data strongly suggest that targeting of cranin to focal adhesions was dependent upon the presence of an extracellular ligand capable of binding cranin directly. How-ever, some cultured nonmuscle cell lines (e.g., human umbilical vein endothelial cells, NIH 3T3 and CHO cells) failed to localize cranin to focal adhesions, even when plated on laminin. Cranin was also enriched at cell-cell adherens-type junctions of human normal breast MCF-10 epithelial cells, and at growth cones of E17 rat hippocampal axons. That cranin can become targeted to sites of cell-cell and cell-substratum contact in diverse cell types supports the hypothesis that cranin may be involved in mediating or regulating cell adhesion. The absence of muscle-specific and synapse-specific proteins within fibroblasts and epithelial cells provides a different context for thinking about cranin (dystroglycan) that may aid in discerning general principles of its structure and function.  相似文献   

5.
Thrombospondin-1 (TSP1) can inhibit angiogenesis by interacting with endothelial cell CD36 or proteoglycan receptors. We have now identified alpha3beta1 integrin as an additional receptor for TSP1 that modulates angiogenesis and the in vitro behavior of endothelial cells. Recognition of TSP1 and an alpha3beta1 integrin-binding peptide from TSP1 by normal endothelial cells is induced after loss of cell-cell contact or ligation of CD98. Although confluent endothelial cells do not spread on a TSP1 substrate, alpha3beta1 integrin mediates efficient spreading on TSP1 substrates of endothelial cells deprived of cell-cell contact or vascular endothelial cadherin signaling. Activation of this integrin is independent of proliferation, but ligation of the alpha3beta1 integrin modulates endothelial cell proliferation. In solution, both intact TSP1 and the alpha3beta1 integrin-binding peptide from TSP1 inhibit proliferation of sparse endothelial cell cultures independent of their CD36 expression. However, TSP1 or the same peptide immobilized on the substratum promotes their proliferation. The TSP1 peptide, when added in solution, specifically inhibits endothelial cell migration and inhibits angiogenesis in the chick chorioallantoic membrane, whereas a fragment of TSP1 containing this sequence stimulates angiogenesis. Therefore, recognition of immobilized TSP1 by alpha3beta1 integrin may stimulate endothelial cell proliferation and angiogenesis. Peptides that inhibit this interaction are a novel class of angiogenesis inhibitors.  相似文献   

6.
Endoglin is the gene mutated in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia type 1 (HHT1), a dominantly inherited vascular disorder. Endoglin glycoprotein is a component of the transforming growth factor type beta (TGF-beta) receptor system which is highly expressed by endothelial cells, and at lower levels on fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells, suggesting the involvement of these lineages in the HHT1 vascular dysplasia. Overexpression of endoglin in mouse NCTC929 fibroblasts led to decreased migration in chemotactic and wound healing assays, as well as changes in the cellular morphology. When plated on uncoated surfaces, endoglin transfectants formed intercellular clusters, endoglin being not specifically localized to the cell-cell junctions, but homogenously distributed on the cellular surface. Although the expression of alpha5beta1 integrin and of an activation epitope of beta1 integrin were unchanged, a polyclonal antibody to alpha5beta1 integrin was able to inhibit cluster formation, suggesting the involvement of integrin ligand/s. In fact, coating with fibronectin, laminin, or an RGD-containing 80 kDa fragment of fibronectin were able to prevent the cellular clustering. Furthermore, synthesis of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), and to a weak extent that of fibronectin, were inhibited in endoglin transfectants. Thus, the presence of endoglin in mouse NCTC929 fibroblasts is associated with reduced production of certain extracellular matrix (ECM) components, which might explain their altered morphology, migration and intercellular cluster formation.  相似文献   

7.
Morphology and mechanical properties of cultured endothelial cells were measured, using a novel atomic force microscope (AFM) system, developed in our laboratory, in conjunction with an inverted confocal laser scanning microscope. We used this system to examine endothelial cell both in static cultures and exposed to a shear stress of 2 Pa. Initially, the three-dimensional topography of a cell was measured by the AFM and a location was selected for the subsequent measurement of the mechanical response of the cell. The surface of statically cultured cell was smooth. The cell height was not altered by the exposed duration of shear stress. A relationship between external force, F, and the indentation depth, delta, was obtained for several different locations on a cell. This force-indentation response was modelled using a quadratic equation, F = adelta2 + bdelta, indicating that two parameters, a and b, will be constants which are representative of the mechanical response. Endothelial cells cultured at static conditions demonstrated a polygonal shape and less stiff mechanical characteristics around the nucleus compared to those at peripheral regions. The stiffness of the endothelial cells exposed to shear stress increased with the duration time of exposure. At 6-h exposures, the stiffness was higher at upstream side of the cell than the downstream side. However, after 24-h exposure, the stiffness was similar on both sides of the cell. These changes in the stiffness of endothelial cells when exposed to shear stress were suggested to correspond with the distribution of stress fibers in the cell.  相似文献   

8.
Many cell types alter their morphology and gene expression profile when grown on chemically equivalent surfaces with different rigidities. One expectation of this change in morphology and composition is that the cell’s internal stiffness, governed by cytoskeletal assembly and production of internal stresses, will change as a function of substrate stiffness. Atomic force microscopy was used to measure the stiffness of fibroblasts grown on fibronectin-coated polyacrylamide gels of shear moduli varying between 500 and 40,000 Pa. Indentation measurements show that the cells’ elastic moduli were equal to, or slightly lower than, those of their substrates for a range of soft gels and reached a saturating value at a substrate rigidity of 20 kPa. The amount of cross-linked F-actin sedimenting at low centrifugal force also increased with substrate stiffness. Together with enhanced actin polymerization and cross-linking, active contraction of the cytoskeleton can also modulate stiffness by exploiting the nonlinear elasticity of semiflexible biopolymer networks. These results suggest that within a range of stiffness spanning that of soft tissues, fibroblasts tune their internal stiffness to match that of their substrate, and modulation of cellular stiffness by the rigidity of the environment may be a mechanism used to direct cell migration and wound repair.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated the spatial distribution of alpha5beta1 integrin in isolated ventral plasma membranes (VPMs) of human foreskin fibroblasts in order to elucidate how the interaction of integrin with cytoskeletal and extracellular matrix proteins might affect the integrin distribution. Cells were exposed to the jet of buffer to remove the apical surface and most of cellular organelles. After this treatment VPMs, which adhered to the glass surface, possessed the cellular structures such as fibronectin (FN) fibrils and actin stress fibers. The isolated VPMs thus prepared were employed without fixation to investigate the change in the integrin distribution. In isolated VPMs, alpha5beta1 integrin, labeled with Cy3-tagged anti-integrin antibody, was found to accumulate not only at the tips of stress fibers but also along FN fibrils extending from there. When divalent cations were removed with EDTA, the accumulated integrin was dispersed, and the original pattern of distribution was recovered upon restoration of divalent cations. Talin, an integrin-actin cytoskeleton linker protein, was found to accumulate only at the tips of stress fibers in isolated VPMs, but alpha5beta1 integrin did not exhibit strong accumulation there, indicating that talin played little role in integrin distribution in isolated VPMs. The amount of alpha-actinin associated with stress fibers was found to drastically decrease in isolated VPMs, which was presumably related to the failure of localization of integrin at the tips of stress fibers. It was also shown that the association of stress fibers to isolated VPMs seemed to be independent of accumulation of integrin.  相似文献   

10.
Antibodies were raised against a cytoskeleton-associated, nonphosphorylated, 230,000-dalton bovine lens polypeptide (designated p230), and rendered monospecific by using a novel immunoaffinity technique. In immunofluorescence and electron microscopy of cultured fibroblasts, as well as of various other cells (endothelial, epithelial, lenticular, monocytes, neuroblastoma cells) and tissues (human kidney and liver), p230 was localized as a distinct subplasmalemmal layer in the peripheral cytoplasm of the cells. It constituted less than 0.3% of the total cellular protein in cultured fibroblasts and was not extractable with Triton X-100. In detergent-extracted cytoskeletal preparations of cultured fibroblasts, p230 remained as an elaborate peripheral network that showed a distribution distinctly different from that of the major cytoskeletal structures, stress fibers, cortical myosin, vinculin, and intermediate filaments (IF). The distribution was not dependent on the presence of intact stress fibers or microtubules, as shown by double-fluorescence microscopy of cells exposed to cytochalasin B or cultured in the presence of monensin and of cold-treated cells. Upon demecolcine-induced reorganization of intermediate filaments, however, the localization of p230 was rapidly altered to a dense plaque underneath the perinuclear aggregate of intermediate filaments. On the other hand, p230 seemed to colocalize with the detergent-resistant cell surface lamina, visualized in fluorescence microscopy with fluorochrome-coupled wheat germ agglutinin-lectin. The results suggest that p230 is part of a cell surface- and cytoskeleton-associated subplasmalemmal structure that may play an important role in cell surface-cytoskeleton interaction in various cells both in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
Cell shape, cytoskeletal mechanics, and cell cycle control in angiogenesis   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Capillary endothelial cells can be switched between growth and differentiation by altering cell-extracellular matrix interactions and thereby, modulating cell shape. Studies were carried out to determine when cell shape exerts its growth-regulatory influence during cell cycle progression and to explore the role of cytoskeletal structure and mechanics in this control mechanism. When G0-synchronized cells were cultured in basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-containing defined medium on dishes coated with increasing densities of fibronectin or a synthelic integrin ligand (RGD-containing peptide), cell spreading, nuclear extention, and DNA synthesis all increased in parallel. To determine the minimum time cells must be adherent and spread on extracellular matrix (ECM) to gain entry into S phase, cells were removed with trypsin or induced to retract using cytochalasin D at different times after plating. Both approaches revealed that cells must remain extended for approximately 12–15 h and hence, most of G1, in order to enter S phase. After this restriction point was passed, normally ‘anchorage-dependent’ endothelial cells turned on DNA synthesis even when round and in suspension. The importance of actin-containing microfilaments in shape-dependent growth control was confirmed by culturing cells in the presence of cytochalasin D (25–1000 ng ml−1): dose-dependent inhibition of cell spreading, nuclear extension, and DNA synthesis resulted. In contrast, induction of microtubule disassembly using nocodazole had little effect on cell or nuclear spreading and only partially inhibited DNA synthesis. Interestingly, combination of nocodazole with a suboptimal dose of cytochalasin D (100 ng ml−1) resulted in potent inhibition of both spreading and growth, suggesting that microtubules are redundant structural elements which can provide critical load-bearing functions when microfilaments are partially compromised. Similar synergism between nocodazole and cytochalasin D was observed when cytoskeletal stiffness was measured directly in living cells using magnetic twisting cytometry. These results emphasize the importance of matrix-dependent changes in cell and nuclear shape as well as higher order structural interactions between different cytoskeletal filament systems for control of capillary cell growth during angiogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
There is a growing appreciation of the profound effects that passive mechanical properties, especially the stiffness of the local environment, can have on cellular functions. Many experiments are conducted in a 2D geometry (i.e., cells grown on top of substrates of varying stiffness), which is a simplification of the 3D environment often experienced by cells in vivo. To determine how matrix dimensionality might modulate the effect of matrix stiffness on actin and cell stiffness, endothelial cells were cultured on top of and within substrates of various stiffnesses. Endothelial cells were cultured within compliant (1.0–1.5 mg/ml, 124±8 to 202±27 Pa) and stiff (3.0 mg/ml, 502±48 Pa) type-I collagen gels. Cells elongated and formed microvascular-like networks in both sets of gels as seen in previous studies. Cells in stiffer gels exhibited more pronounced stress fibers and ~1.5-fold greater staining for actin. As actin is a major determinant of a cell's mechanical properties, we hypothesized that cells in stiff gels will themselves be stiffer. To test this hypothesis, cells were isolated from the gels and their stiffness was assessed using micropipette aspiration. Cells isolated from relatively compliant gels were 1.9-fold more compliant than cells isolated from relatively stiff gels (p<0.05). Similarly, cells cultured on top of 1700 Pa polyacrylamide gels were 2.0-fold more compliant that those cultured on 9000 Pa (p<0.05). These data demonstrate that extracellular substrate stiffness regulates endothelial stiffness in both three- and two-dimensional environments, though the range of stiffnesses that cells respond to vary significantly in different environments.  相似文献   

13.
One of the four principal categories of cell-cell junctions that hold together and shape distinct tissues and organs in vertebrates, adherens junctions (AJs) form cell-cell contacts that connect transmembrane proteins with cytoskeletal actin filaments to provide architectural strength, aid in morphogenesis, and help to maintain proper tissue homeostasis. The classical organization of AJs, consisting of transmembrane cadherins and cytoplasmically attached β-catenins and α-catenins assembled together into a multiprotein complex, was once thought obligatory to craft a robust and stable connection to actin-based cytoskeletal elements, but this architecture has since been challenged and questioned to exist. In a stimulating paper published in a recent issue of BMC Biology, Millán et al. provide convincing evidence that in confluent vascular endothelial cells a novel dynamic vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin-based AJ type exists that interacts with and physically connects prominent bundles of tension-mediating actin filaments, stress fibers, between neighboring cells. Stress fibers were known previously to link to integrin-based focal adhesion complexes but not to cell-cell adhesion mediating AJs. These new findings, together with previous results support the concept that different AJ subtypes, sharing the same transmembrane cadherin types, can assemble in various configurations to either increase barrier function and promote physical cell-cell adhesion, or to lessen cell-cell adhesion and promote cell separation and migration.  相似文献   

14.
Previous evidence has shown a deficiency in microfilament stress fiber formation upon short-term cycloheximide treatment of cultured human dermal fibroblasts while cytoplasmic spreading appeared completely normal and other cytoskeletal networks organized normally. This deficiency applied to collagen substrata (not fibronectin substrata) and was specific for in vitro-aged normal fibroblasts and for fibroblasts from three different Down's syndrome patients at any passage level. To identify the mechanism(s) for matrix receptor deficiency in aging cells, cells were evaluated for amounts and distributions of several integrin subunits using specific monoclonal antibodies and two complementary experimental approaches. Flow cytometric analyses have shown that all these cells at all passage levels have large amounts of alpha 3 and beta 1 integrin subunits and smaller amounts of the alpha 5 subunit, directed to fibronectin, which are minimally affected in their cell surface availability by cycloheximide treatment. In contrast, cycloheximide treatment leads to the loss from surface availability of most of the alpha 2 subunit, directed to collagen, in late-passage papillary and reticular normal fibroblasts and in all three Down's patient cells at all passages. Prior growth of cells in ascorbate-supplemented medium, which overcomes the deficiency in stress fiber formation, conserves the large amounts of cell surface-available alpha 2 subunit detectable by flow cytometry. When amounts of integrin subunits were evaluated by immunoprecipitation of [35S]methionine-radiolabeled cells, there was no diminution of the alpha 2 subunit or any other subunit for any cells upon cycloheximide treatment; however, there was much less alpha 2 subunit complexed with beta 1 in aging normal and Down's cells. Therefore, cycloheximide treatment does not lead to loss in the amounts of the alpha 2 subunit but rather to its masking at the cell surface and inability to transmit signals across the plasma membrane to effect stress fiber formation. This aging-related deficiency in integrin-mediated signaling can now be studied mechanistically with a variety of approaches to determine the nature of cell-surface molecules interacting with integrins (cis- and/or trans-acting molecules) that discriminate functional from nonfunctional receptors.  相似文献   

15.
Biorheological views of endothelial cell responses to mechanical stimuli   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Sato M  Ohashi T 《Biorheology》2005,42(6):421-441
Vascular endothelial cells are located at the innermost layer of the blood vessel wall and are always exposed to three different mechanical forces: shear stress due to blood flow, hydrostatic pressure due to blood pressure and cyclic stretch due to vessel deformation. It is well known that endothelial cells respond to these mechanical forces and change their shapes, cytoskeletal structures and functions. In this review, we would like to mainly focus on the effects of shear stress and hydrostatic pressure on endothelial cell morphology. After applying fluid shear stress, cultured endothelial cells show marked elongation and orientation in the flow direction. In addition, thick stress fibers of actin filaments appear and align along the cell long axis. Thus, endothelial cell morphology is closely related to the cytoskeletal structure. Further, the dynamic course of the morphological changes is shown and the related events such as changes in mechanical stiffness and functions are also summarized. When endothelial cells were exposed to hydrostatic pressure, they exhibited a marked elongation and orientation in a random direction, together with development of centrally located, thick stress fibers. Pressured endothelial cells also exhibited a multilayered structure with less expression of VE-cadherin unlike under control conditions. Simultaneous loading of hydrostatic pressure and shear stress inhibited endothelial cell multilayering and induced elongation and orientation of endothelial cells with well-developed VE-cadherin in a monolayer, which suggests that for a better understanding of vascular endothelial cell responses one has to take into consideration the combination of the different mechanical forces such as exist under in vivo mechanical conditions.  相似文献   

16.
A gene trap-type targeting vector was designed to inactivate the beta 1 integrin gene in embryonic stem (ES) cells. Using this vector more than 50% of the ES cell clones acquired a disruption in the beta 1 integrin gene and a single clone was mutated in both alleles. The homozygous mutant did not produce beta 1 integrin mRNA or protein, while alpha 3, alpha 5, and alpha 6 integrin subunits were transcribed but not detectable on the cell surface. Heterozygous mutants showed reduced beta 1 expression and surface localization of alpha/beta 1 heterodimers. The alpha V subunit expression was not impaired on any of the mutants. Homozygous ES cell mutants lacked adhesiveness for laminin and fibronectin but not for vitronectin and showed a reduced association with a fibroblast feeder layer. Furthermore, they did not migrate towards chemoattractants in fibroblast medium. None of these functions were impaired in heterozygous mutants. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that homozygous cells showed fewer cell-cell junctions and had many microvilli not usually found on wild type and heterozygous cells. This profound change in cell shape is not associated with gross alterations in the expression and distribution of cytoskeletal components. Unexpectedly, microinjection into blastocysts demonstrated full integration of homozygous and heterozygous mutants into the inner cell mass. This will allow studies of the consequences of beta 1 integrin deficiency in several in vivo situations.  相似文献   

17.
We examined the inhibitory activity of type V collagen on cell attachment and cell growth and the role of stress fibers and beta 1 integrin in cultured human endothelial cells. Human endothelial cells cultured on type V collagen attached temporarily to the substrate and formed stress fibers. However, the cells failed to proliferate and gradually detached from the substrate. After 24 h, the cells on type V collagen lacked discernible stress fibers (F-actin filaments) and exhibited dots in small aggregates of F-actin. In addition, the cells expressed little or no proteins as focal adhesions, including vinculin and beta 1 integrin. In contrast, the cells on fibronectin and type I collagen formed complete F-actin filaments, exhibited sufficient vinculin and beta 1 integrin, and grew logarithmically from 2 days. On the other hand, human smooth muscle cells formed complete F-actin filaments, revealed typical focal adhesions, and started to proliferate rapidly after 24 h on type V collagen as well as on fibronectin and type I collagen. Thus, the disassembly of F-actin filaments was observed as a specific phenomenon in human endothelial cells cultured on type V collagen. Moreover, the F-actin filaments disappeared from endothelial cells treated with cytochalasin D after 24 h and the cells detached from fibronectin and type I collagen with time, a result consistent with the observations on type V collagen. Accordingly, the disassembly of F-actin filaments in focal adhesions may result in the detachment of endothelial cells from type V collagen.  相似文献   

18.
The structural models created to understand the cytoskeletal mechanics of cells in suspension are described here. Suspended cells can be deformed by well-defined surface stresses in an Optical Stretcher [Guck, J., Ananthakrishnan, R., Mahmood, H., Moon, T.J., Cunningham, C.C., K?s, J., 2001. The optical stretcher: a novel laser tool to micromanipulate cells. Biophys. J. 81(2), 767-784], a two-beam optical trap designed for the contact-free deformation of cells. Suspended cells have a well-defined cytoskeleton, displaying a radially symmetric actin cortical network underlying the cell membrane with no actin stress fibers, and microtubules and intermediate filaments in the interior. Based on experimental data using suspended fibroblasts, we create two structural models: a thick shell actin cortex model that describes cell deformation for a localized stress distribution on these cells and a three-layered model that considers the entire cytoskeleton when a broad stress distribution is applied. Applying the models to data, we obtain a (actin) cortical shear moduli G of approximately 220 Pa for normal fibroblasts and approximately 185 Pa for malignantly transformed fibroblasts. Additionally, modeling the cortex as a transiently crosslinked isotropic actin network, we show that actin and its crosslinkers must be co-localized into a tight shell to achieve these cortical strengths. The similar moduli values and cortical actin and crosslinker densities but different deformabilities of the normal and cancerous cells suggest that a cell's structural strength is not solely determined by cytoskeletal composition but equally importantly by (actin) cytoskeletal architecture via differing cortical thicknesses. We also find that although the interior structural elements (microtubules, nucleus) contribute to the deformed cell's exact shape via their loose coupling to the cortex, it is the outer actin cortical shell (and its thickness) that mainly determines the cell's structural response.  相似文献   

19.
In order to understand the sensitivity of alveolar macrophages (AMs) to substrate properties, we have developed a new model of macrophages cultured on substrates of increasing Young's modulus: (i) a monolayer of alveolar epithelial cells representing the supple (approximately 0.1 kPa) physiological substrate, (ii) polyacrylamide gels with two concentrations of bis-acrylamide representing low and high intermediate stiffness (respectively 40 kPa and 160 kPa) and, (iii) a highly rigid surface of plastic or glass (respectively 3 MPa and 70 MPa), the two latter being or not functionalized with type I-collagen. The macrophage response was studied through their shape (characterized by 3D-reconstructions of F-actin structure) and their cytoskeletal stiffness (estimated by transient twisting of magnetic RGD-coated beads and corrected for actual bead immersion). Macrophage shape dramatically changed from rounded to flattened as substrate stiffness increased from soft ((i) and (ii)) to rigid (iii) substrates, indicating a net sensitivity of alveolar macrophages to substrate stiffness but without generating F-actin stress fibers. Macrophage stiffness was also increased by large substrate stiffness increase but this increase was not due to an increase in internal tension assessed by the negligible effect of a F-actin depolymerizing drug (cytochalasine D) on bead twisting. The mechanical sensitivity of AMs could be partly explained by an idealized numerical model describing how low cell height enhances the substrate-stiffness-dependence of the apparent (measured) AM stiffness. Altogether, these results suggest that macrophages are able to probe their physical environment but the mechanosensitive mechanism behind appears quite different from tissue cells, since it occurs at no significant cell-scale prestress, shape changes through minimal actin remodeling and finally an AMs stiffness not affected by the loss in F-actin integrity.  相似文献   

20.
Cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions are important physiological determinants of cell growth, survival and transformation. Cell adhesion to the extra cellular matrix (ECM) via integrins also crucially influences the organization of the cytoskeleton. It triggers a cascade of intracellular biochemical events, which regulate cell viability and growth. We have studied the relationship between cell attachment to the substratum and cytoskeletal organization and cell survival and transformation. Our results demonstrate that in the absence of attachment to the substratum, adhesion-dependent fibroblasts exhibit rapid loss of viability. However, a small percentage of cells survive even after remaining non-adherent for 16h. The adherent and non-adherent cells differ from one another both morphologically and physiologically. The latter show a loss of alpha5beta1 integrin expression on their surface and bind non-specifically to the substratum and ECM, thereby activating certain pathways more efficiently than adherent cells. We have also shown that non-adherent cells grow faster and have worse cytoskeletal organization after attachment to the substratum, and do not form focal adhesions or actin stress fibres. Hence, our data suggests that rat fibroblasts in prolonged suspension exhibit some properties that are comparable to cells undergoing transformation, by adapting integrin-dependent or independent signalling pathways for their survival.  相似文献   

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