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Tensile Loads on Tethered Actin Filaments Induce Accumulation of Cell Adhesion-Associated Proteins in Vitro.

Daisuke KiyoshimaHitoshi TatsumiHiroaki HirataMasahiro Sokabe
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2018)
Focal adhesions (FAs) and adherens junctions (AJs), which serve as a mechanical interface of cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions, respectively, experience tensile force either originating from the deformation of the surrounding tissues or generated by the actomyosin machinery in the cell. These mechanical inputs cause enlargement of FAs and AJs, while the detailed mechanism for the force-dependent development of FAs and AJs remain unclear. Both FAs and AJs provide sites for tethering of actin filaments and actin polymerization. Here, we develop a cell-free system, in which actin filaments are tethered to glass surfaces, and show that application of tensile force to the tethered filaments in the cell extract induces accumulation of several FA and AJ proteins, associated with further accumulation of actin filaments via de novo actin polymerization. Decline in the tensile force results in a decrease in the amount of the accumulated proteins. These results suggest that the tensile force acting on the tethered actin filaments plays a crucial role in the accumulation of FA and AJ proteins.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • single molecule
  • cell therapy
  • cell free
  • stem cells
  • oxidative stress
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • candida albicans