Publikationen Abteilung Mechanobiologie von Geweben

2006

Nonmuscle myosin IIA-dependent force inhibits cell spreading and drives F-actin flow

Yunfei Cai, Nicolas Biais, Gregory Giannone, Monica Tanase, Guoying Jiang, Jake M. Hofman, Chris H. Wiggins, Pascal Silberzan, Axel Buguin, et al.

Biophysical Journal 91 (10) 3907-3920 (2006) | Journal

Nonmuscle myosin IIA (NMM-IIA) is involved in the formation of focal adhesions and neurite retraction. However, the role of NMM-IIA in these functions remains largely unknown. Using RNA interference as a tool to decrease NMM-IIA expression, we have found that NMM-IIA is the major myosin involved in traction force generation and retrograde F-actin flow in mouse embryonic fibroblast cells. Quantitative analyses revealed that similar to 60% of traction force on fibronectin-coated surfaces is contributed by NMM-IIA and similar to 30% by NMM-IIB. The retrograde F-actin flow decreased dramatically in NMM-IIA-depleted cells, but seemed unaffected by NMM-IIB deletion. In addition, we found that depletion of NMM-IIA caused cells to spread at a higher rate and to a greater area on fibronectin substrates during the early spreading period, whereas deletion of NMM-IIB appeared to have no effect on spreading. The distribution of NMM-IIA was concentrated on the dorsal surface and approached the ventral surface in the periphery, whereas NMM-IIB was primarily concentrated around the nucleus and to a lesser extent at the ventral surface in cell periphery. Our results suggest that NMM-IIA is involved in generating a coherent cytoplasmic contractile force from one side of the cell to the other through the cross-linking and the contraction of dorsal actin filaments.

Traction forces exerted through N-cadherin contacts

Arthur Ganz, Mireille Lambert, Alexandre Saez, Pascal Silberzan, Axel Buguin, Rene Marc Mege, Benoit Ladoux

Biology of the Cell 98 (12) 721-730 (2012) | Journal

Background information. Mechanical forces play an important role in the organization, growth and function of living tissues. The ability of cells to transduce mechanical signals is governed by two types of microscale structures: focal adhesions, which link cells to the extracellular matrix, and adherens junctions, which link adjacent cells through cadherins. Although many studies have examined forces induced by focal adhesions, there is little known about the role of adherens junctions in force-regulation processes. The present study focuses on the determination of force transduction through cadherins at a single cell level.<br> Results. We characterized for the first time the distribution of forces developed by the cell through cadherin contacts. A N-cadherin (neural cadherin)-Fc chimaera, which mimicks the cell adhesion molecule N-cadherin, was immobilized on a mu FSA (micro-force sensor array), comprising a dense array of vertical elastomer pillars, which were used both as a cell culture support for N-cadherin-expressing C2 myogenic cells and as detectors for force mapping. We coated the top of the pillars on which cells adhere and recruit adhesion complexes and F-actin. Individual pillar bending allowed the measurement of forces that mainly developed at the cell edge and directed toward their centre. Similar force distribution and amplitude were detected with an unrelated cell line of neuronal origin. Further comparison with forces applied by cells on pillars coated with fibronectin indicates that mechanical stresses transduced through both types of adhesions were comparable in distribution, orientation and amplitude.<br> Conclusions. These results present a versatile method to measure and map forces exerted by cell-cell adhesion complexes. They show that cells transduce mechanical stress through cadherin contacts which are of the same order as magnitude of those previously characterized for focal adhesions. Altogether, they emphasize the mechano-transduction role of cytoskeleton-linked adhesion receptors of the cadherin family in tissue cohesion and reshaping.

Micro-actuators: When artificial muscles made of nematic liquid crystal elastomers meet soft lithography

A Buguin, MH Li, P Silberzan, B. Ladoux, P Keller

Journal of the American Chemical Society 128 (4) 1088-1089 (2006) | Journal

The production, via soft lithography, of micron-sized thermoresponsive pillars made of side-on nematic LCE leads to the formation of surface-responsive structures. The individual, monodisperse pillars, when cut out from the surface, behave as micro-actuators, showing contraction of around 35% at the nematic to isotropic phase transition

Kontakt

Abteilung Mechanobiologie von Geweben
Prof. Benoît Ladoux
Principal Investigator

Max-Planck-Zentrum für Physik und Medizin
Kussmaulallee 2
91054 Erlangen

benoit.ladoux@mpzpm.mpg.de

09131 8284 650

Assistentin:
Martina Caliaro
martina.caliaro@fau.de

 

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