Cell stretching is amplified by active actin remodelling to deform and recruit proteins in mechanosensitive structures.
Sophie MassouFilipe Nunes VicenteFranziska WetzelAmine MehidiDan StrehleCecile LeducRaphaël VoituriezOlivier RossierPierre NassoyGrégory GiannonePublished in: Nature cell biology (2020)
Detection and conversion of mechanical forces into biochemical signals controls cell functions during physiological and pathological processes. Mechanosensing is based on protein deformations and reorganizations, yet the molecular mechanisms are still unclear. Using a cell-stretching device compatible with super-resolution microscopy and single-protein tracking, we explored the nanoscale deformations and reorganizations of individual proteins inside mechanosensitive structures. We achieved super-resolution microscopy after live stretching on intermediate filaments, microtubules and integrin adhesions. Simultaneous single-protein tracking and stretching showed that while integrins followed the elastic deformation of the substrate, actin filaments and talin also displayed lagged and transient inelastic responses associated with active acto-myosin remodelling and talin deformations. Capturing acute reorganizations of single molecules during stretching showed that force-dependent vinculin recruitment is delayed and depends on the maturation of integrin adhesions. Thus, cells respond to external forces by amplifying transiently and locally cytoskeleton displacements, enabling protein deformation and recruitment in mechanosensitive structures.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- single cell
- single molecule
- cell therapy
- binding protein
- amino acid
- induced apoptosis
- high throughput
- cell migration
- label free
- stem cells
- high speed
- liver failure
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- blood brain barrier
- hepatitis b virus
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- sensitive detection
- atomic force microscopy
- drug induced
- structural basis