Literature DB >> 17905847

Reversal of cell polarity and actin-myosin cytoskeleton reorganization under mechanical and chemical stimulation.

Jérémie Dalous1, Emmanuel Burghardt, Annette Müller-Taubenberger, Franz Bruckert, Günther Gerisch, Till Bretschneider.   

Abstract

To study reorganization of the actin system in cells that invert their polarity, we stimulated Dictyostelium cells by mechanical forces from alternating directions. The cells oriented in a fluid flow by establishing a protruding front directed against the flow and a retracting tail. Labels for polymerized actin and filamentous myosin-II marked front and tail. At 2.1 Pa, actin first disassembled at the previous front before it began to polymerize at the newly induced front. In contrast, myosin-II slowly disappeared from the previous tail and continuously redistributed to the new tail. Front specification was myosin-II independent and accumulation of polymerized actin was even more focused in mutants lacking myosin-II heavy chains. We conclude that under mechanical stimulation, the inversion of cell polarity is initiated by a global internal signal that turns down actin polymerization in the entire cell. It is thought to be elicited at the most strongly stimulated site of the cell, the incipient front region, and to be counterbalanced by a slowly generated, short-range signal that locally activates actin polymerization at the front. Similar pattern of front and tail interconversion were observed in cells reorienting in strong gradients of the chemoattractant cyclic AMP.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17905847      PMCID: PMC2186262          DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.107.114702

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biophys J        ISSN: 0006-3495            Impact factor:   4.033


  45 in total

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3.  Time-resolved responses to chemoattractant, characteristic of the front and tail of Dictyostelium cells.

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