Kate Poole1, Regina Herget1, Liudmila Lapatsina1, Ha-Duong Ngo2, Gary R Lewin1. 1. Department of Neuroscience, Max-Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, Robert-Rössle Straße 10, D-13092 Berlin, Germany. 2. Microsensor & Actuator Technology, Technische Universität Berlin, D-13355 Berlin, Germany.
Abstract
In sensory neurons, mechanotransduction is sensitive, fast and requires mechanosensitive ion channels. Here we develop a new method to directly monitor mechanotransduction at defined regions of the cell-substrate interface. We show that molecular-scale (~13 nm) displacements are sufficient to gate mechanosensitive currents in mouse touch receptors. Using neurons from knockout mice, we show that displacement thresholds increase by one order of magnitude in the absence of stomatin-like protein 3 (STOML3). Piezo1 is the founding member of a class of mammalian stretch-activated ion channels, and we show that STOML3, but not other stomatin-domain proteins, brings the activation threshold for Piezo1 and Piezo2 currents down to ~10 nm. Structure-function experiments localize the Piezo modulatory activity of STOML3 to the stomatin domain, and higher-order scaffolds are a prerequisite for function. STOML3 is the first potent modulator of Piezo channels that tunes the sensitivity of mechanically gated channels to detect molecular-scale stimuli relevant for fine touch.
In sensory neurons, mechanotransduction is sensitive, fast and requires mechanosensitive ion channels. Here we develop a new method to directly monitor mechanotransduction at defined regions of the cell-substrate interface. We show that molecular-scale (~13 nm) displacements are sufficient to gate mechanosensitive currents in mouse touch receptors. Using neurons from knockout mice, we show that displacement thresholds increase by one order of magnitude in the absence of stomatin-like protein 3 (STOML3). Piezo1 is the founding member of a class of mammalian stretch-activated ion channels, and we show that STOML3, but not other stomatin-domain proteins, brings the activation threshold for Piezo1 and Piezo2 currents down to ~10 nm. Structure-function experiments localize the Piezo modulatory activity of STOML3 to the stomatin domain, and higher-order scaffolds are a prerequisite for function. STOML3 is the first potent modulator of Piezo channels that tunes the sensitivity of mechanically gated channels to detect molecular-scale stimuli relevant for fine touch.
Skin sensations are richly varied; contrast the flutter sensation set off by a tuning
fork to the pain of a blunt impact. Many people have the ability to perceive vibrations
with peak-to-peak amplitudes of just a few hundred nanometres12.
In contrast, blunt pressure stimuli are signalled by distinct mechanosensitive afferents
and are perceived as painful. Both fine and coarse mechanical stimuli are detected by a
heterogeneous group of primary afferents with their cell bodies in the trigeminal and
dorsal root ganglia (DRG). Virtually all sensory neurons are capable of converting
mechanical stimuli into an electrical signal, a process termed mechanotransduction345. However, the sensitivity of the primary transduction
mechanism must be scaled between different sensory neuron types to cover the range of
relevant mechanosensory stimuli. The issue of dynamic range and its molecular basis has
received scant attention to date. The primary transduction mechanism used to convert
mechanical energy into an electrical signal in sensory neurons requires mechanosensitive
ion channels, and mechanosensitive currents can be evoked in acutely isolated sensory
neurons by indenting the cell soma or neurites678910111213. Auditory mechanotransduction in hair cells of the inner ear also relies on
mechanosensitive ion channels, and here the mechanotransduction apparatus has nanometre
sensitivity for low and high frequencies. The identity of the mechanically gated ion
channel for hearing is unknown. Nevertheless, the biophysical properties of hair cell
mechanotransducers have been well characterized and are remarkably uniform in different
hair cell types14. In contrast, the biophysical properties of
mechanotransducers in sensory neurons are heterogeneous and may indicate the presence of
more than one type of mechanosensitive ion channel310.Sensory neurons can be broadly classed into one of two major groups, mechanoreceptors
(required for touch) and nociceptors (required for mechanical pain). It might be
expected that mechanosensitive currents in nociceptors have higher displacement
thresholds for activation than those found in mechanoreceptors, and there is evidence to
support this idea810. However, existing techniques are ill-suited
to address open questions about the precise mode by which mechanosensitive ion channels
are gated in sensory neurons. For example, mechanosensitive channels may open on local
membrane stretch or may be gated by changes in tension transferred to the channel via
the cytoskeleton or via attachments to the extracellular matrix (ECM). The most common
technique used to activate mechanosensitive currents in sensory neurons is indentation
of the cell soma or neurite. An alternate method to activate mechanosensitive channels
is to use positive or negative pressure applied to cell-attached or -excised patches of
membrane1516171819. However, the latter method runs the
danger of removing the channel from the cytoskeletal or ECM environment in which it
normally resides and is activated. There is now considerable evidence in sensory neurons
that functional mechanotransduction complexes form at the cell-substrate interface and
include not only the mechanically gated ion channels but also intracellular and
extracellular components linked to the ECM6101120. If this
model is correct, cell soma or neurite indentation represents an indirect stimulation
method of the relevant transduction complexes, as force must be propagated through the
entire cell to gate channels at the cell-substrate interface. The physical dimensions of
the DRG neurons and neurites vary significantly21 and there will be
a viscoelastic deformation of the cell or neurite22 on indentation.
There are thus large uncertainties about the precise contact area of the probe and the
area of the cell-substrate interface actually subjected to any mechanical displacement.
In addition, any variation in the mechanical properties of the cells will modulate the
stimulus. One fundamental consequence of these experimental limitations is that truly
accurate measurements of the displacement needed to gate mechanosensitive channels in
sensory neurons are missing. Here we introduce a new technique using precise movement of
defined substrate areas to gate mechanosensitive channels. This technique has enabled us
for the first time to measure the precise displacements required to open
mechanosensitive ion channels and to study their modulation.Mousestomatin-like protein 3
(STOML3) is a member of the
stomatin-domain family of proteins that, like its Caenorhabditis elegans
orthologue MEC-2, is required for
normal mechanotransduction in touch receptors202324. The
molecular mechanisms by which this protein regulates mechanosensitive channels are,
however, unknown. Recently, the Piezo proteins have been identified as true
mechanosensitive ion channels implicated in sensory mechanotransduction, both in rat DRG
neurons and in nociceptors of fruit fly larvae252627. We show
that a subpopulation of mechanoreceptors have native mechanosensitive currents that are
ultrasensitive to tiny substrate deflections (<13 nm) for which
STOML3 is required. Furthermore,
in heterologous systems STOML3 can
tune Piezo-mediated currents to molecular-scale deflections
(~10 nm), as observed in native sensory neurons, and we identify
key residues in the STOML3 molecule
required for the modulation. Thus, STOML3 can tune the sensitivity of sensory neurons to mechanical
stimuli and this molecular mechanism may in part account for the wide range of
sensitivity exhibited by sensory neurons.
Results
Using pillar arrays as force transducers
We developed a novel method to quantitatively study mechanoelectrical
transduction at the cell-substrate interface. This method fulfils the following
important design specifications: the stimulus is applied to spatially defined
regions of the cell-substrate interface; the magnitude of stimulus movement can
be measured with nanometre precision; and the method is compatible with stable
patch-clamp recordings. To meet these experimental requirements, we cultured
mouse DRG neurons on elastomeric pillar arrays cast from polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS) and applied stimuli via the substrate by deflecting a single pilus, using
a piezo-driven nanomotor (Fig. 1; Supplementary Movie 1), while monitoring fast
cellular responses using a whole-cell patch clamp.
Figure 1
Elastomeric pillar arrays for mechanical stimulation.
(a,b) SEM images of pillar arrays; scale bars
5 μm. (c) Acutely prepared DRG neuron expressing
Lifeact-mGFP (green) cultured on EHS laminin/Cy3-coated pillar arrays
(magenta); scale bar 20 μm. (d) Cultured DRG
neuron neurites grow across the tops of pili (similar observations made in
five cells, from three transfections); scale bar 5 μm.
(e) Mechanical stimuli are applied to the
neuron–laminin interface by applying a series of deflections to
an individual pilus while recording from the cell with a whole-cell patch
clamp. Black arrow indicates pilus being moved; attached neurite is outlined
in yellow; scale bar 5 μm. (f) The centre point
(red arrow) is determined using a 2D-Gaussian fit of intensity values; scale
bar 1 μm. (g) Nanoscale stimuli applied at the
neuron–substrate interface activate RA, IA or SA currents
(observations made in 23 cells).
Positive silicon masters were microfabricated and used to generate negative
moulds from which pillar arrays were cast28 (Fig. 1a,b). We created several different pillar geometries but found
two on which sensory neurons extend neurites and most data presented here were
generated using pili with a top surface area of
10.07 μm2 and a spring constant
(k) of 290 pN nm−1
(Fig. 1b; Supplementary Fig. 1); some experiments were carried out with
thinner, more compliant
(k=6.7 pN nm−1)
pillar arrays (Supplementary Fig.
1). The calculated restoring force differed by an order of magnitude
between the two pillar arrays but deflections needed to gate mechanosensitive
currents in sensory neurons were comparable (Supplementary Figs 1 and 3), suggesting that
deflection and not force is the most relevant physical parameter29. The tops of the pili were coated with EHS laminin (hereafter called
laminin), a substrate supportive of neurite outgrowth from DRG cells and
permissive for mechanotransduction6. Within 24 h
of plating, DRG neurons attach and establish neuritic trees with cell-substrate
contact points restricted to the tops of the pili (Fig.
1c,d). We monitored neurite growth over the pili either by filling
single cells with the fluorescent dye Lucifer Yellow or by transfecting cells
with plasmids encoding Lifeact-eGFP to label actin21. To
generate stimulus–response curves, a series of deflections were
applied to a single pilus using a piezo-driven, heat-polished, glass tip and the
resulting currents were recorded (Fig. 1e). For each data
point, the deflection of the pilus was calculated from bright-field images taken
before, during and after the stimulus: as each pilus acts as a light guide, the
centre of the pilus could be calculated from a two-dimensional Gaussian fit of
intensity values and the centre points from successive images were compared
(Fig. 1f). The positions of adjacent pili were
monitored to ensure that no more than one pilus moved. As in previous studies
using cell indentation, three types of mechanosensitive currents could be
evoked: the rapidly adapting (RA, inactivation time constant
<5 ms); intermediate adapting (IA, inactivation time constant
5–50 ms); or slowly adapting (SA, little inactivation
within 200 ms) currents (example current traces, Fig.
1g).
Soma and neurite indentation versus substrate deflection
Very small movements of individual pili evoked robust and fast mechanosensitive
currents. In contrast to soma and neurite indentation, we could generate these
currents with considerably smaller stimulus magnitudes; as little as
10 nm for pillar arrays compared with
200–750 nm for neurite indentation61020 and 1–9 μm for soma indentation7812 (Fig. 2a). The dramatically
lower deflection thresholds found for mechanotransduction on pili support the
idea that substrate deflection allows the most direct activation of
mechanosensitive channels. We asked whether DRG neurons responded to mechanical
stimuli with a single current type or with heterogeneous currents. We found that
soma indentation results in a single current type in most cells, with some cells
responding to multiple stimuli with two distinct current types. In contrast, in
neurons where stimuli were applied by neurite indentation or pillar deflection
significantly, more cells responded to multiple stimuli with more than one
current type (Fig. 2b). This observation suggests that
multiple current types may be present, but are not observed with the commonly
used soma indentation technique. In addition, the smaller displacements
necessary to gate mechanosensitive currents suggest that the mechanosensitive
ion channels are primarily activated at the cell-substrate interface (Fig. 2c).
Figure 2
Comparing modes of mechanical stimulation.
(a) RA, IA and SA currents were observed on mechanical indentation of
the soma, neurites or on deflection of a neurite-bound pilus. (b) On neurite
indentation and pillar deflection, a higher variability was observed in the
current types measured within a single cell
(χ test;
***P<0.001). Data collected from 23 cells in all three
conditions; soma and neurite indentation represent matched data; pillar
deflection is data from a separate set of cells. (c) Schematic
representation of mechanical stimulation. Cell indentation studies require
propagation of the physical stimulus via the cell to the cell-substrate
interface. In contrast, deflecting a single pilus allows a defined stimulus
to be applied directly at localized cell–matrix contacts.
Quantification of mechanosensitivity in sensory neurons
We next classified sensory neurons based on a combination of action potential
(AP) characteristics and mechanotransduction thresholds. Sensory fibres
innervating the skin can be broadly classified as nociceptors with high
mechanical thresholds appropriate for pain sensing and mechanoreceptors with low
thresholds necessary for light touch5. The DRG neurons that
give rise to these different afferent fibres are also referred to as nociceptors
and mechanoreceptors. We asked whether these two subpopulations of DRG neurons
differed in terms of threshold for mechanotransduction. Mechanoreceptors have a
distinctive narrow AP, and these cells possessed fast and sensitive RA or IA
currents with deflection thresholds of as little as a few nanometres (Fig. 3a,b). The kinetics of mechanosensitive currents in
mechanoreceptors was similar, but not identical to those found using cell
indentation (Supplementary Fig. 2;
Supplementary Table 1).
Nociceptors, classified by their broad and humped AP12303132, possessed RA, IA and SA currents that had significantly higher
deflection thresholds compared with currents found in mechanoreceptors (Fig. 3b). The latency between the movement of a pilus and
activation of the current was significantly longer in nociceptors compared with
that in mechanoreceptors (Fig. 3c). This indicates that
the differences in mechanical threshold of mechanoreceptor and nociceptor
sensory fibres can be, in part, explained by differences in the threshold for
mechanotransduction in individual neurons. We noticed that there was substantial
variability in the stimulus–response curves of putative
mechanoreceptors (Fig. 3b). In fact, two types of
mechanoreceptors could be distinguished on the basis of their AP
configuration32 and mechanosensitive current
sensitivity (see Supplementary Fig.
3 for single cell examples). Type I cells exhibited very narrow APs
(<0.7 ms) with short after-hyperpolarization times
(<4 ms) and type II cells displayed wider APs
(>0.7 ms) with longer after-hyperpolarization times
(>4 ms) (Fig. 3d,e). Type I cells
exhibited predominantly RA currents with small amplitudes and high deflection
thresholds (Fig. 3f,g), whereas type II cells displayed
large amplitude, ultrasensitive RA and IA currents (Fig.
3f,g). Type II mechanoreceptors typically exhibited mechanosensitive
currents to pili deflections of around 10 nm (Fig.
3f; Supplementary Fig.
3). In order to compare between cell types, we binned the data by stimulus
magnitude (0–10, 10–50, 50–100,
100–250, 250–500 and 500–1,000 nm)
and averaged the current amplitudes within each bin for each cell. We found that
type II mechanoreceptors exhibited significantly larger currents than those
observed in type I mechanoreceptors in the deflection ranges 0–10,
10–50 and 50–100 nm (Fig.
3f; Supplementary Table
2). The current amplitudes could also be modelled by a Boltzmann fit,
and this analysis approximates the deflection amplitude for half-maximal
activation to be 63 nm for type I and just 10 nm for type
II mechanoreceptors (Supplementary Fig.
3). The time constant of current activation,
τ1, did not differ (Fig.
3i); however, because type II cells displayed both RA and IA currents
(Fig. 3g,h), the mean time constant of current
inactivation, τ2, was significantly longer
(28.5±1.2 ms) (41 currents from 8 cells) compared with the
mostly RA currents found in type I cells (8.2±1.2 ms) (71
currents from 8 cells) (Mann–Whitney U-test,
P<0.001) (Supplementary
Table 1). There is thus heterogeneity in mechanoreceptor sensitivity
with type II cells exhibiting extraordinarily high sensitivity. This finding
suggests that the heterogeneity in the sensitivity of mechanoreceptor fibres can
be explained by intrinsic differences in mechanotransducer sensitivity. In fact,
type II cells possessed APs that were most similar to those of D-hair receptors
measured in vivo3132. D-hair receptors are
ultrasensitive skin mechanoreceptors with mechanical thresholds at least an
order of magnitude lower than those of other mechanoreceptors—for
example, rapidly adapting mechanoreceptors33334.
Figure 3
Mechanically gated currents in mechanoreceptors and nociceptors.
(a) Mechanically gated currents in mechanoreceptors (narrow AP, no
hump in the falling phase) were exclusively transient RA and IA currents; in
nociceptors (broad APs, hump on falling phase) RA, IA and SA currents were
observed. (b) A stimulus–response plot of individual data
points (blue–mechanoreceptors, n=243 data points/17 cells;
magenta–nociceptors, n=110 data points/13 cells) collected
on array with
k=290 pN m−1
(insert: SEM image of pillar array, scale bar 5 μm).
(c) The latency of channel gating was significantly shorter in
mechanoreceptors (n=18) versus nociceptors (n=13,
Student’s t-test, **P<0.01).
(d,e) Mechanoreceptor APs can be classed into two
additional subgroups, type I (blue) and type II (green), based on width
(full-width at half-maximum) and duration of recovery after
hyperpolarization. (f) Binned data indicate the higher sensitivity of
type II compared with type I mechanoreceptors; current amplitudes were
averaged for each bin and averages compared (type I: n=9 cells; type
II: n=8 cells). To test for significance, Student's t-test was
used; data are displayed as mean±s.e.m. (g) Representative
currents from type I mechanoreceptors (blue trace; black line indicates
τ2 fit, 2 ms) and for type II
mechanoreceptors (green traces; black line indicates
τ2 fit, 5.0 ms and 49).
(h) Individual type I mechanoreceptors displayed either exclusively
RA currents or exclusively IA currents. A mixture of both RA and IA currents
was observed in individual type II mechanoreceptors. (i) Activation
time constant (τ1) of mechanotransduction
currents (n=55 currents, 9 type I cells; 74 currents, 8 type II
cells), presented as mean±s.e.m. Data obtained for cells cultured
on arrays where
k=290 pN nm−1.
STOML3 is required for
molecular-scale sensitivity
We next studied the role of STOML3, an integral membrane protein orthologous to
MEC-2 from C.
elegans20243536, necessary for normal
touch-driven behaviour in the mouse. The behavioural deficit in stoml3mice can be attributed to mechanical insensitivity of a subset of
mechanoreceptor fibres. We first transfected acutely prepared DRG neurons with a
plasmid encoding STOML3-mGFP
and found that the protein accumulated at the pili–neurite contact
points as seen in an epifluorescence image (Fig. 4a,b),
further supporting the hypothesis that mechanotransduction channel complexes
form at the cell-substrate interface. In neurite-indentation experiments
(stimulus magnitude 750 nm) with stoml3mouse DRG neurons, 36% of neurons lacked mechanosensitive currents20; however, all 25 stoml3
neurons studied here exhibited mechanosensitive currents on pillar deflection.
This clearly demonstrates that the presence of STOML3 is not an absolute prerequisite
for the formation of a functional mechanosensitive complex and suggests that the
pillar array method allows us to measure high-threshold mechanosensitive
currents not detectable with indentation. We classified the stoml3
neurons as type I or type II mechanoreceptors or as nociceptors on the basis of
AP configuration, and binned and averaged the stimulus–response data,
as for wild-type cells. We found no significant difference in response to
mechanical stimuli between type I mechanoreceptors from C57Bl/6 mice versus
stoml3mice (Fig. 4d; Supplementary Fig. 4), a finding consistent with the preserved
mechanosensitivity of many stoml3
mechanoreceptor fibres20. In contrast, at smaller
deflections (0–10, 10–50 and
50–100 nm), currents measured in type II mechanoreceptors
from stoml3mice were almost absent compared with those observed in control neurons (Fig. 4e; Supplementary Fig. 4). In addition, within the deflection range of
100–250 nm, nociceptors from stoml3mice produced significantly smaller currents than those observed in nociceptors
isolated from control mice (Fig. 4f) (See Supplementary Table 2 for a summary of
statistics). When stimulus–response functions were approximated from
Boltzmann fits of the data for type II mechanoreceptors and nociceptors, we
noted a substantial increase of around fourfold in the deflection needed for
half-maximal activation of the currents in stoml3
neurons, compared with control (Supplementary Fig. 4). The latencies for RA and IA currents were
slightly longer in stoml3
neurons than in control neurons (Supplementary Fig. 4). SA currents in stoml3
nociceptors had distinctly slower latencies and activation kinetics
(τ1), and a 10–40-fold slowing down
in both parameters (Supplementary Fig.
4). These data suggest that the primary function of STOML3 may be to facilitate the transfer
of force to mechanically gated channels.
Figure 4
Mechanotransduction currents in DRG neurons from stoml3
mice.
(a) Acutely isolated DRG neurons expressing STOML3-mGFP (green) cultured on a
pillar array coated with EHS laminin/Cy3 (magenta); scale bar
20 μm. (b) STOML3-mGFP is targeted preferentially to contact
points; the insert indicates line scan of intensity corresponding to the
yellow line (similar observations made in eight cells, from three
transfections, on eight pillar arrays); scale bar
20 μm. (c) In stoml3
DRG neurons, we observed RA, IA and SA currents.
(d–f) All data were binned into stimulus sizes
and current amplitudes were averaged for each bin and compared between
C57Bl/6 mice and stoml3
mice. Data are displayed as mean±s.e.m. (d) Type I
mechanoreceptors from C57Bl/6 mice (n=9 cells) versus
stoml3
mice (n=7 cells). (e) Type II mechanoreceptors isolated from
C57Bl/6 mice (n=8 cells) versus stoml3
mice (n=8 cells). (f) Nociceptors from C57Bl/6 mice
(n=13 cells) versus stoml3
mice (n=9 cells). To test for significance Student's t-test
was used; *P<0.05, **P<0.01,
***P<0.001. Data were obtained for cells cultured on arrays
where
k=290 pN nm−1.
Modulation of Piezo1-mediated currents by STOML3
There has been debate over the molecular identity of stretch-activated channels
in mammalian cells18, but it is now clear that the Piezo
proteins can form true mechanosensitive channels2526.
Therefore, we next tested the effects of STOML3 on Piezo1-mediated currents in N2aneuroblastoma cells. N2a
cells were grown on uncoated pillar arrays and transfected with a plasmid
encoding Lifeact-mCherry (Fig. 5a). In control N2a cells,
pillar deflections evoked robust mechanosensitive currents with a surprising
diversity of inactivation kinetics (Fig. 5b), including
rapidly inactivating currents and essentially non-inactivating currents (Fig. 5b; Supplementary Table 3); we could find no systematic relationship
between stimulus amplitude and inactivation kinetics (data not shown), but a
similar behaviour for Piezo1
has been noted19. Compared with DRG neurons, relatively
large pillar deflections were required to activate the N2a mechanosensitive
current (most often >200 nm) (Fig. 5c;
see Supplementary Fig. 5 for all
individual data points). However, this stimulus size is considerably smaller
than that required for channel gating using cell indentation in the same cell
type (>5 μm)26. Using microRNA
(miRNA)-mediated reduction of Piezo1 expression, we could demonstrate an almost complete
loss of mechanically gated currents observed within our stimulus range
(0–1,000 nm) (Fig. 5c), clearly
demonstrating that the currents observed on pillar deflection are mediated by
the same channels measured with cell indentation.
Figure 5
STOML3 increases
Piezo1 and Piezo2 sensitivity.
(a) Inverted epifluorescence images of N2a neuroblastoma cells
expressing Lifeact-mCherry and STOML3-mGFP cultured on uncoated, PDMS pillar arrays
(similar observations were made in 26 cells from 7 transfections (lifeAct)
and in 19 cells from 10 transfections (STOML3-mGFP)). Inset is an overview of Lifeact-mCherry
signal in an individual cell; scale bars, 10 μm.
(b) In individual cells, mechanically gated currents with
variable kinetics were observed: black traces N2a control cells; blue traces
N2a cells overexpressing STOML3-mGFP. (c–f)
Stimulus–response data were binned and weighted by cell, and
displayed as mean±s.e.m. and compared using Student’s
t-test where *P<0.05, **P<0.01,
***P<0.001. (c) When endogenous Piezo1 was knocked down with miRNA
(100 measurements, 10 cells) mechanosensitivity was significantly reduced
compared with control cells treated with scrambled miRNA (145 measurements,
12 cells), Two-way analysis of variance (P<0.001), with
Bonferroni post-tests (**P<0.01). (d) Current
amplitudes were detected with stimuli much less than 100 nm in
N2a cells overexpressing STOML3-mGFP (n=19 cells) compared with control
cells (n=26 cells), and knockdown of endogenous STOML3 messenger RNA led to a
strong reduction in current amplitudes below control levels
(**P<0.01; data compared with miRNA controls plotted in panel
c). (e,f) Stimulus–response data of
mechanically gated currents in HEK-293 cells expressing Piezo1 (e) or Piezo2 (f) in the presence
or absence of STOML3. As
seen in N2a cells, the presence of STOML3 dramatically increased Piezo channel-mediated
mechanosensitivity in HEK-293 cells. (g) Co-immunoprecipitation of
Piezo1 with
STOML3 pulldown in
HEK-293 cells. Experiment was repeated six times, and in each case bands
corresponding to Piezo proteins were detected in eluates from STOML3 pulldown.
Upon overexpression, the STOML3
protein was targeted to the cell–pilus contact points (Fig. 5a), and we observed a dramatic decrease in the deflection
threshold for the Piezo1
currents, with robust currents evoked with deflections as small as
10 nm. Cells overexpressing STOML3 also exhibited significantly larger currents at
smaller deflections, compared with control cells (Fig. 5d;
Supplementary Table 4). Using
quantitative PCR, we found low levels of endogenous STOML3 messenger RNA in N2a cells and
miRNA-mediated knockdown of endogenous STOML3 dramatically reduced Piezo1 currents to pili deflections up
to 1,000 nm compared with controls (Fig. 5d;
Supplementary Fig. 5; Supplementary Table 4).We next directly tested whether STOML3 could modulate both Piezo1 and Piezo2 currents by heterologously
expressing these channels with STOML3 in HEK-293 cells. Using pillar arrays, we could show
that both Piezo1 and
Piezo2 currents exhibited
dramatically reduced deflection thresholds in the presence of STOML3 (Fig. 5e,f;
Supplementary Fig. 5; Supplementary Tables 4 and 5).
Robust channel gating was observed with molecular-scale pillar deflections
similar in magnitude to those described for the most sensitive DRG neurons.
Thus, STOML3 is a potent
modulator of both Piezo1 and
Piezo2 channels. We also
carried out biochemical studies to ask whether there is a physical interaction
between STOML3 and Piezo
proteins. Both Piezo1 and
Piezo2 proteins were found
to co-precipitate with STOML3
after overexpression in HEK-293 cells (Fig. 5g; Supplementary Figs 5–7);
we could detect HA-tagged Piezo1 bands in the eluate only when STOML3 was present. Interestingly, the
Piezo1-positive bands
detected from the immunoprecipitate appeared to represent extremely large
protein complexes (>0.5 MDa) similar in size to Piezo1 proteins in SDS-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis gels after chemical crosslinking25.We next determined whether the STOML3-dependent sensitization is specific to STOML3, or is a general feature of
stomatin-domain proteins. We studied the effect of overexpression of
stomatin, STOML1 (found in mammalian DRG
neurons36), podocin (found in mammalian podocytes37) and MEC-2 (required
for gentle body touch in C. elegans) on mechanosensitive currents in N2a
cells. No significant differences were detected in the sensitivity or the
kinetics of the mechanically gated currents after overexpression of
stomatin, STOML1 or MEC-2 (Supplementary Fig. 8; Supplementary Tables 3 and 4). A mild but
statistically significant effect of podocin overexpression was found only for deflections
between 50 and 100 nm compared with control cells (Supplementary Fig. 8; Supplementary Tables 3 and 4). Thus, the
tuning of mechanotransduction sensitivity in N2a cells is not a general property
of stomatin-domain proteins. However, we noticed that successive suprathreshold
stimuli led to a steady desensitization of mechanosensitive currents in N2a
cells (Fig. 6a,b), in a localized manner (that is, at a
single pilus). Stimulation of a new pilus contacted by the same cell initially
produced mechanosensitive currents of normal magnitude. In contrast, this
desensitization phenomenon was considerably attenuated in N2a cells
overexpressing STOML3 or
STOML1, but not in cells
overexpressing MEC-2,
podocin or stomatin (Fig.
6b–f). Thus, the stomatin-domain proteins STOML1 and STOML3 have a potent effect in
preventing short-term desensitization of Piezo currents dependent on prior
mechanical stimulation.
Figure 6
Desensitization of mechanosensitive currents in N2a cells is prevented by
STOML3 and STOML1.
(a) Example traces from successive pillar deflections in control N2a
cells (black traces), in N2a cells overexpressing STOML3-mGFP (cyan traces) or
STOML1-mCherry (green
traces). Stimuli were applied ~5 s apart.
(b–e) Successive suprathreshold stimuli led to
current desensitization in N2a cells (n=22 stimulation points).
However, when either (b) STOML3 (n=25 stimulation points) or (c)
STOML1 (n=19
stimulation points) is present, mechanosensitive currents do not desensitize
as fast as controls; two-way analysis of variance (P<0.001).
In addition, Bonferroni post-tests indicate that the probability of
measuring a current in response to the second, third and fourth
suprathreshold stimuli is significantly higher in those cells overexpressing
STOML3 or
overexpressing STOML1
(*P<0.05, **P<0.01,
***P<0.001). This desensitization is not modulated in the
presence of (d) stomatin (n=15 stimulation points), (e)
podocin (n=23
stimulation points) or (f) MEC-2 (n=13 stimulation points). Data were
obtained for cells cultured on arrays where
k=290 pN nm−1.
Control data are re-plotted in each panel for comparison, all data presented
as mean±s.e.m.
STOML3
structure–function analysis
We next asked whether oligomerization of STOML3 is important for its function in tuning
mechanosensitivity. Stomatin,
the closest relative of STOML3, forms dimers, and mutations that disrupt dimerization
interfere with stomatin-mediated modulation of acid-sensing ion channels38. As such, we introduced a mutation into STOML3 at the orthologous position
predicted to disrupt dimerization (V190P). We confirmed that STOML3-V190P exhibited reduced
oligomerization in comparison with STOML3 using bimolecular fluorescence complementation assays
(BiFC)3940 (Fig. 7; Supplementary Fig. 9). The
STOML3-V190P protein did
not sensitize mechanically gated currents in N2a cells, and the measured
currents did not differ significantly from those in wt N2a cells (Fig. 7a; Supplementary Table
4). STOML3 function
is thus, in part, dependent on its ability to properly oligomerize. Despite the
fact that MEC-2 did not
modulate Piezo1 currents in
N2a cells, we tested whether residues important for MEC-2 function are also important in
STOML3 function. The
u64 mec-2 allele
has severe effects on gentle body touch in C. elegans, as a result of a
missense mutation (R184C) at a residue conserved in mammalianstomatin-domain
proteins. The corresponding Arg in STOML3, R90, is predicted to be present at an interaction
surface in the stomatin domain named interface-2 (refs 38, 41). Using BiFC, we analysed
oligomerization of two sets of mutations designed to disrupt interface-2:
STOML3-R90A and
STOML3-LR89,90EE. We found
that both mutations decreased the BiFC signal, and both mutations essentially
abolished STOML3 modulation of
mechanosensitive currents in N2a cells (Fig. 7a,c; Supplementary Fig. 9; Supplementary Table 4). Mutations at
interface-2 also severely altered the intracellular distribution of the protein
as we observed virtually no vesicular localization as seen with wild-type
protein and described by us in sensory neurons40 (Fig.7b). This phenotype has a striking parallel in C.
elegans where the orthologous mutation leads to a mis-localization of
MEC-2 (ref. 41). However, a fraction of the fluorescently labeled
STOML3-R90A and
STOML3-LR89,90EE proteins
did appear to reach the membrane (Fig.7b). We have
previously shown that stomatin, carrying a mutation at the same position, does
retain some modulatory activity on ASIC3-mediated currents38, indicating
that it can reach the plasma membrane. Some stomatin-domain proteins, including
MEC-2, bind cholesterol3742
and one of the MEC-2 alleles
found to abolish cholesterol
binding (P134S) has a strong effect on touch-driven behaviour in the worm. The
P134SMEC-2 variant shows
impaired activity in modulating MEC-4/MEC-10 ion channels3742. Mutation of
the orthologous proline in
STOML3 (P40S) leads to
STOML3 mis-localization
predominantly to the cytoplasmic compartment; yet this mutant is still fully
active in modulating ASIC2a
channels, suggesting that a fraction of this variant must still reach the plasma
membrane40. In contrast, the STOML3-P40S protein lost its ability to
modulate the threshold of Piezo1 currents in N2a cells (Fig.
7a). Thus, STOML3
modulation of ASIC currents is separable from its powerful modulatory effects on
mechanosensitive currents.
Figure 7
Residues required for oligomerization and correct localization are necessary
for STOML3 function.
(a) Stimulus–response curves for N2a cells overexpressing
LifeAct-mCherry and fluorescently tagged STOML3 variants. Data were binned by stimulus magnitude
and current amplitudes within each bin averaged for each cell and then
averaged between cells, presented as mean±s.e.m; STOML3-V190P-mGFP (magenta squares;
172 measurements, 15 cells), STOML3-R90A-mGFP (grey squares; 218 measurements, 15
cells), STOML3-LR89,90EE-mGFP (green squares; 136 measurements, 13
cells), STOML3-P40S-mGFP
(black squares; 142 measurements, 15 cells). Data from wtSTOML3 overexpression are
re-plotted here for comparison (cyan squares) (b) Inverted
epifluorescent images of STOML3 variants. Note that STOML3-V190P is localized similarly
to wtSTOML3;
STOML3-R90A and
–LR89,90EE are localized in part to the membrane, but the
vesicular fraction is lost and STOML3-P40S does not seem to be localized at the
membrane nor in a vesicle pool (observations made on 15 cells/4
transfections). Scale bar 10 μm. (c) BiFC assays
were used as a cell-based assay for oligomerization. In all cases
wtSTOML3-VN was used
as bait and as a control wtSTOML3-VC as prey. For experiments conducted on a single
day, average slope of YFP signal development for the control was calculated
and used to normalize all data. Data are displayed as mean±s.e.m.
Oligomerization was significantly reduced when the STOML3-V190P-VC, STOML3-R90A-VC and LR89,90EE-VC
variants were used as prey, in comparison with controls;
Student’s t-test; ***P<0.001; n
numbers indicate the number of transfections.
We next investigated whether STOML3 sensitization of mechanically gated currents is
dependent on the STOML3stomatin domain. To address this question, we created two protein chimeras: one
containing the stomatin domain of stomatin flanked by the amino- and carboxy-terminal regions
of STOML3 (Chimera1; Fig. 8) and the second containing the stomatin domain from
STOML3 flanked by the N-
and C-terminal regions of Stomatin (Chimera2; Fig. 8).
Mechanically gated currents in N2a cells expressing Chimera2 did not differ
significantly from those in cells overexpressing wtSTOML3. Chimera1 expression resulted in
slightly more sensitive mechanically gated currents compared with those in
control N2a cells but this effect was significantly less than that of
wtSTOML3 (Fig. 8; Supplementary Fig.
10; Supplementary Table
4). Thus, the stomatin domain of STOML3 is largely responsible for the effect on
Piezo1 sensitivity.
Figure 8
The stomatin domain of STOML3 is necessary to sensitize Piezo currents in N2a
cells.
(a) Inverted epifluorescence images of Chimera1-mGFP and
Chimera2-mCherry in N2a cells (observations made in 15 cells/4 transfections
and 14 cells/4 transfections respectively; scale bar,
10 μm). Both chimeras localized to a vesicle pool and
the plasma membrane. (b) Schematic representation of the two chimera
proteins. (c) Stimulus–response data for Chimera1-mGFP
(yellow circles; 220 measurements, 15 cells) and Chimera2-mCherry (blue
circles; 299 measurements, 14 cells) in N2a cells. Control N2a cell data
re-plotted here for comparison (open triangles) Data were binned by stimulus
magnitude and current amplitudes within each bin averaged for each cell and
then between cells, presented as mean±s.e.m. To test for
significance, Student's t-test was used; *P<0.05.
Chimera2, containing the stomatin-domain from STOML3, sensitized mechanically
mediated currents more effectively than did Chimera1.
Discussion
We have developed a sensitive, quantitative approach to study mechanotransduction in
primary sensory neurons that will also be applicable to virtually any adherent cell
type. This method was designed such that we could apply fine, measureable physical
stimuli at the cell-substrate interface while simultaneously monitoring the
electrical response of the cell using a whole-cell patch clamp. We have demonstrated
that the most sensitive cellular domain to mechanical stimuli is the cell-substrate
interface, as considerably smaller stimuli were required for robust channel gating,
in comparison with indentation techniques (Fig. 2). This
supports a model in which native mechanotransduction complexes resident in the
plasma membrane are linked directly or indirectly to the ECM. This method has
enabled us to demonstrate that mechanosensitive ion channels display distinct
thresholds depending on the DRG neuronal subtype. Notably, we have identified a
class of mechanoreceptors (defined here as type II mechanoreceptors) that display a
remarkable sensitivity to mechanical stimuli. Thus, molecular-scale deflections,
sometimes less than 10 nm, proved sufficient to gate mechanosensitive
channels in these cells. Based on the characteristics of APs measured in type II
cells, we suggest that they may be D-hair receptors. We also identified a molecular
mechanism controlling the scaling of mechanoreceptor sensitivity: the genetic
removal of STOML3 in sensory
neurons was sufficient to reduce the sensitivity of almost all mechanoreceptors to a
uniformly low level, such that substrate displacements in the order of several
hundred nanometres were required to gate mechanosensitive channels in these cells.
The dramatic decrease in sensitivity to substrate displacement in the absence of
STOML3 probably accounts for
the observed mechanoinsensitivity of cutaneous afferents in stoml3
mice20. The initiation of AP is dependent on the presence
of channels that regulate the excitability of the membrane, like potassium
channels43, as well as the size of the receptor potentials
generated by mechanosensitive channels. We used pillar arrays to study the
activation and modulation of Piezo channels, which have been shown to be candidate
pore-forming subunits of the mechanosensitive channel in sensory neurons26. We show for the first time that a stomatin-domain protein can
directly modulate the sensitivity of Piezo1 and Piezo2 channels, shifting the substrate displacement threshold
by several orders of magnitude into a range (~10 nm) observed
for the native current in ultrasensitive mechanoreceptors. This powerful effect on
Piezo channel sensitivity was not found for other stomatin-domain proteins, like
stomatin, podocin, MEC-2 and STOML1, and structure–function
studies indicated that this activity is primarily located in the stomatin domain of
STOML3.The existence of stretch-activated cationic currents in many different cell types has
been known for several decades but the molecular identity of these channels has been
controversial18. The Piezo proteins do form true
stretch-activated cation channels and have properties very similar to
stretch-activated channel activity recorded in many cell types including sensory
neurons1516. The question naturally arises as to why cell
types with a non-mechanosensory function possess similar stretch-activated channels
to specialized mechanoreceptors? There are potentially two answers to this question,
which are not mutually exclusive. It may be that the pore-forming subunit of the
mechanotransduction apparatus in sensory neurons is not intrinsically stretch
sensitive but is rendered so by its association with other proteins, as may be the
case for the MEC-4/MEC-10 channels in worm body-touch
receptors2442. The second possibility is that the
mechanosensitivity of stretch-activated pore-forming subunits can be modulated to
make them sensitive to mechanical stimuli that are relevant for sensation. We
present strong evidence that this latter mechanism indeed operates in mouse sensory
neurons. In vivo many mechanoreceptors have remarkable sensitivity, firing
APs to skin displacements of less than 1 μm, and this can
essentially explain similar psychophysical thresholds to vibratory stimuli1243. We show that the presence of STOML3 in many mouse mechanoreceptors is
necessary to ensure that mechanosensitive channels are activated by molecular-scale
displacements of the plasma membrane. The magnitude of the mechanical stimulus that
reaches mechanoreceptor endings embedded in the skin is likely to be much attenuated
compared with stimuli applied to the skin. Thus the nanometre-scale sensitivity is
probably necessary to maintain normal psychophysical thresholds for detecting
vibration and roughness.The stomatin-domain proteins MEC-2
and STOML3 have both been found
to be necessary to maintain mechanoreceptor function in nematodes and mice,
respectively2024. However, although the MEC-2 protein has been shown to enable the
function of constitutively active MEC-4/MEC-10
channels, it has not been shown to induce or modulate an intrinsically
mechanosensitive channel3542. In contrast, STOML3 can dramatically potentiate the
sensitivity of Piezo channels to substrate deflection, but despite modulating a
non-DEG/ENaC-type channel, some structural requirements for modulation are similar
to those found for MEC-2’s role as part of the mechanotransduction
apparatus. Thus mutation of residues involved in cholesterol binding (STOML3-P40S) or those involved in the formation of higher-order
oligomerization (STOML3-R90A;
STOML3-LR89,90EE)37384142, all abolished the activity of STOML3 and of MEC-2. Some mutant proteins, but not the
dimerization mutant V190P, do appear to be mis-localized in cells and therefore it
is hard to determine whether oligomerization per se determines correct
localization. Interestingly, STOML3 appears to have a highly specific effect as related
proteins including, stomatin,
STOML1 and MEC-2 did not modulate Piezo1 currents. Nevertheless,
STOML3 and STOML1 shared the interesting property of
preventing desensitization of channel activity after multiple stimuli at a single
pilus. This property may be very important for the in vivo function of such
proteins to ensure that mechanoreceptors or nociceptors do not display run-down with
repeated stimuli. Indeed, one prominent property of many single afferent fibres in
stoml3-mutant
mice is that they respond only once to tap stimulus and cannot subsequently be
activated20.Using chimeric constructs we show that much of the activity on mechanosensitive
currents is apparently retained with the STOML3stomatin domain. This finding suggests that there is
something unique about the STOML3stomatin domain that enables modulation of mechanosensitive channel gating. We
propose that by forming higher-order scaffolds around mechanosensitive channels
STOML3 may facilitate the
transfer of force to the channel and that mutations that disrupt the ability of
STOML3 to form
membrane-associated scaffolds disrupt function. Thus, the presence of absolute
levels of STOML3 in different
receptor types (for example, mechanoreceptors versus nociceptors) may enable the
appropriate molecular tuning of mechanoreceptor sensitivity. It is entirely possible
that the same mechanism is engaged when nociceptors become sensitized to mechanical
stimuli. The method we have introduced offers the opportunity to study
molecular-scale gating of mechanosensitive channels with a resolution not previously
possible.
Methods
Cell culture
DRGs from C57Bl/6 mice (aged 4–6 weeks, male and female) were
dissected and collected in 1 ml phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) on
ice and treated with
1 μg ml−1
collagenase IV in 1 ml PBS for 30 min at
37 °C and then treated with 1 ml of 0.05% trypsin
in PBS for 5–20 min at 37 °C. Cells
were dissociated in 1 ml DMEM/F-12 by passaging with a 20G needle and
then collected, washed and finally resuspended in DMEM/F-12 medium containing
10% horse serum and seeded on pillar arrays (2–3 per prep). Cells
were cultured overnight at 37 °C in a Steri-Cult 200
incubator with no added neurotrophic factors. Mouse strains from which DRGs were
isolated were either wild-type C57Bl/6 from Charles River, or stoml3
on a pure C57Bl/6 background20. All experiments involving
mice were carried out in accordance with protocols approved by the German
federal authorities (State of Berlin).DRG neurons were transfected using the Amaxa Nucleofector Kit, as per the
manufacturer’s instructions. Proliferative cells were incubated
overnight on pillar arrays, and Fugene HD
(Promega) was used for transfection, as per the
manufacturer’s instructions. N2a cells (a gift from Phil Selenko)
were incubated overnight in media containing low serum (2%) before imaging or
patch-clamp analysis. Cultured cell lines (N2a and HEK-293) were tested negative
for mycoplasma infection.
Molecular biology
All fluorescent constructs were generated by replacing EGFP fluorophore of
pEGFP-N3 plasmid with a sequence of interest and either monomeric EGFP or
mCherry. Constructs for BiFC analysis were created by inserting the gene of
interest, in frame, into the multiple cloning site of pBiFC-VC155 or
pBiFC-VN173. Point mutations were introduced using PCR-based site-directed
mutagenesis. See Supplementary Table
6 for full plasmid list.
Fabrication of silicon masters
Positive silicon masters were fabricated using standard MEMS technology. Briefly,
a silicon wafer of standard
thickness (525 μm) was spin coated with a
1-μm-thick layer of positive photoresist (AZ1514). The resist layer
was exposed with ultraviolet light and developed. Pillar structures were then
created using the BOSCH deep-etching process using a DSE tool from Unaxis.
After deep etching, the resist layer was removed.
Casting and coating pillar arrays
Masters were silanized using vapour phase (tridecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydrooctyl) trichlorosilane 97%
(AB111444, ABCR GmbH & Co. KG, Karlsruhe, Germany) for 8 h.
Negative masters were cast from PDMS
(Sylgard 184, Dow Corning, USA) using a 1:10
mix of the two components cured at 110 °C for
15 min. The PDMS mould was gently peeled away from the silicon master
and the individual arrays were isolated; negative masters were silanized as
above and used in four castings before re-silanization44.
To cast arrays, freshly mixed PDMS (1:10) was placed in a vacuum for
30 min; silanized negative masters were covered with fluid PDMS and
left for 30 min. Next, glass coverslips (thickness 2) were activated
by oxygen plasma treatment in
a FEMTO plasma cleaner (Diener Electronic, Nagold, Germany) and placed, activated side
down, on the PDMS-covered moulds. Pillar arrays were cured at
110 °C for 1 h.Two methods were used to coat the pili tops with EHS laminin: reverse
microcontact printing and adsorption. PDMS components were mixed at a 1:20 ratio
and cured for 15 min at 110 °C and cut into
cubits. These cubits were covered with Poly-L-lysine printing ink and
incubated for 1 h at 37 °C. The cubits were
placed PLL coated side down onto pillar arrays and activated using oxygen plasma treatment. EHS laminin
(20 μg ml−1) was
then adsorbed to the pili for 45 min at room temperature. For
adsorption, pillar arrays were silanized and a droplet of EHS laminin
(20 μg ml−1) was
placed in the centre of an array and covered with a glass coverslip to spread
the solution. The pillar arrays were then left at 37 °C for
3 h. The second adsorption method gave the most consistent
results45. All the
k=290 pN nm−1 pillar
arrays were coated using the adsorption method.
Characterizing the mechanical properties of the pillar arrays
The elasticity of the same cured PDMS used for pillar arrays was calculated from
force-distance curves using an atomic force microscope (Nanowizard II, JPK
Instruments AG, Berlin, Germany). SICON cantilevers (silicon,
pyramidal-shaped tip, nominal spring constant
0.1–0.6 N m−1)
were calibrated using JPK software to determine the sensitivity and the spring
constant for each experiment. For each sample, at least 250 curves were
generated, at 4 distinct points. Force-distance curves were collected in PBS, to
eliminate cantilever ‘snap-in’ due to electrostatics. The
elasticity of the PDMS was then calculated using the Hertz model, taking into
account a pyramidal-shaped indenter with the JPK Instruments analysis software.
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to determine the dimensions of
individual elements in the pillar array. Pillar arrays were sputter coated with
gold and then imaged
either square to or side-on from the array. The diameter of individual pili and
the centre–centre distance of the elements were calculated from
images taken square to the array. The height of the pili was measured from the
images taken perpendicular to the array elements.The spring constant (k) of the array elements was calculated from its
dimensions and elasticity:where E is the elasticity calculated above. On those occasions when the
restoring force required to return the deflected pilus to its central positions
was calculated, Hooke’s law was used:where d is the empirically determined deflection of the pilus.
Electrophysiology
Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were made using patch pipettes with a tip
resistance of 3–7 MΩ, filled with a solution of
110 mM KCl,
10 mM NaCl,
1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA and 10 mM HEPES, adjusted to pH 7.3 with
KOH. Extracellular
solutions contained (in mM) 140 NaCl, 4 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2, 4 glucose and 10 HEPES, adjusted to pH 7.4 with NaOH. We used a Zeiss 200 inverted
microscope and an EPC-10 amplifier in combination with Patchmaster software.
Data were analysed using Fitmaster software (HEKA Electronik GmbH, Germany).
Pipette and membrane capacitance were compensated using the auto function of
Patchmaster. Series resistance was compensated by at least 60% to minimize
voltage errors. Currents evoked by mechanical stimuli were recorded at a holding
potential of −60 mV in sensory neurons, N2a cells and
HEK-293 cells. For experiments with sensory neurons, voltage-gated sodium
channels were blocked either by a constant superfusion with
1 μM tetrodotoxin or by introducing 10 mM
QX-314 in the
pipette6.Mechanical stimuli were applied by deflecting individual pili using a
heat-polished glass pipette (tip diameter
2–5 μm) driven by the MM3A micromanipulator (KleindiekNanotechnik, Germany). In order to generate
stimulus–response curves, we applied a series of stimuli over the
range of 0–1,000 nm deflection (larger stimuli were
excluded). To collect stimulus–response data, the successive stimuli
were applied with at least 30-s intervals and the size of each stimulus was
randomized. In most cases, more than one pilus per cell was stimulated (see Supplementary Tables 1, 3 and 5 for
detailed numbers of cells/stimulation points/stimuli of individual experiments).
To collect data on Piezo1
desensitization in N2a cells, increasing stimuli were applied to find a
suprathreshold stimulus for that specific cell-matrix region and then successive
stimuli of a similar magnitude were applied at 5-s intervals.Bright-field images of pili movement were obtained using a × 40
objective and a CoolSNAP EZ CCD camera
(Photometrics, AZ, USA), and the centre of each
pilus was determined from a 2D-Gaussian fit of intensity values calculated
offline (Igor software, WaveMetrics, USA). To determine movement, successive
images were analysed before, during and after deflection. All data points
correspond to pillar deflections 0–1,000 nm, with larger
deflections discarded. For all data points, the pillar deflection was
empirically determined and subsequently plotted against the resulting current
amplitude (with an estimated experimental error of 7 nm). In the case
of N2a or HEK-293 cells, pili directly underneath the cells were used as
stimulation points. In sensory neurons, all sub-neurite stimulation points were
within 50 μm of the cell soma (average
23±2.6 μm). We confirmed that distant neurites
were under voltage clamp by measuring the reversal potential of SA currents in
nociceptors (which was 0 mV at the cell body, n=3) and RA
currents in mechanoreceptors (~+60 mV at the as neurite
and cell body, n=3).
Bimolecular fluorescence complementation
For controls, STOML3-VN and
STOML3-VC constructs were
used as bait and prey. HEK-293 cells were transfected with two plasmids encoding
bait and prey proteins using Fugene HD. Transfected cells were then incubated
for 8 h in a Steri-Cult 200 incubator. Cells were harvested and
resuspended in phenol
red-free DMEM media with 25 mM HEPES. For each transfection, a
40 μl cell suspension was dispensed into 24 wells of a
384-well plate. Fluorescence measurements were taken in a plate reader (Infinite 200Pro, TECAN) and relative fluorescence (ex
507±7 nm, em 540±20 nm) was measured
every 30 min, at 37 °C. The slope of signal
development was used as an indicator of STOML3 oligomerization. BiFC experiments were conducted in
triplicate.
Real-time qPCR
Total RNA was extracted from cells using Trizol treatment and DNA was removed
using the Ambion TURBO DNA-free kit. RNA was quantified using a NanoDrop 2000 Spectrophotometer (Thermo Scientific). Two micrograms of RNA per reaction was
reverse transcribed with SuperscriptIII Reverse
Transciptase (Invitrogen) using random
hexamers. With this cDNA, qPCR reactions were performed on a 7900Abi Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems) using probes from the Universal Probe Library (Roche). All PCR reactions were conducted in triplicate.
Absolute messenger RNA levels were normalized against house-keeping genes HPRT1,
cyclophilin D and β-actin. Primers used were as follows: Piezo1,
5′-GACGCCTCACGAGGAAAG-3′ and
5′-GTCGTCATCATCGTCATCGT-3′;
Piezo2,
5′-ACGGTCCAGCTTCTCTTCAA-3′ and
5′-CTACTGTTCCGGGTGCTTG-3′;
Stoml1,
5′-TCCAGATGGAGAAGCTCAAGA-3′ and
5′-AGCTCTGGTCACGTCATTGAT-3′; and
Stoml3,
5′-GGAAGCCAGAGCCAAGGT-3′ and
5′-CATGGAAGCTGACTTCAGAGACT-3′;
Hprt1 5′-TCCTCCTCAGACCGCTTTT-3′ and
5′-CCTGGTTCATCATCGCTAATC-3′;
cyclophilin D 5′-ATGGTGAAAAACCTGCCAA-3′
and 5′-CATCCTCAGGGAAGTCTGGA-3′;
Beta-actin 5′-AAGGCCAACCGTGAAAAGAT-3′
and 5′-gtggtacgaccagaggcatac-3′.
Validation of miRNAs
Two to three different miRNA sequences per target gene were cloned using the
Block-iT Pol II miR RNAi system (Invitrogen). To validate knockdown efficiency,
N2a cells were transfected with a plasmid encoding the miRNA and, in the case of
STOML3, the
STOML3-mCherry plasmid
(Supplementary Table 6). After
48 h, total RNA was isolated and reverse transcribed and qPCR
experiments were performed. HPRT1 and cyclophilin D were used as the reference
genes and a negative control (scrambled miRNA that does not target any known
vertebrate gene) was used as a control. The sequence of the selected miRNAs is
shown in Supplementary Table 7.
Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting
HEK-293 cells were transiently transfected with two epitope-tagged constructs
(STOML3-FLAG with either Piezo1-HA or Piezo2, in a ratio of 1:3) using polyethylenimine (Polyscience). After 24 h, cells were lysed with RIPA
buffer (50 mM Tris
(pH 7.4), 300 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 0.5% deoxycholic
acid, 0.5% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS and a protease inhibitor cocktail
(Sigma-Aldrich)), incubated for 30 min at 4 °C
and centrifuged for 30 min at 13,200 r.p.m. at
4 °C. For immunoprecipitation, 4 μg of
monoclonal mouse anti-FLAG antibody (M2 clone, Sigma-Aldrich) was bound to
Dynabeads (Dynabeads Protein G, Invitrogen) and samples were processed according
to the manufacturer’s instructions. Eluate and lysate of the total
protein extract were separated on NuPAGE Novex 3–8% Tris-Acetate
Mini-Gels (Invitrogen), blotted on nitrocellulose and subjected to standard
antibody detection using the following: mouse monoclonal anti-FLAG antibody (M2
clone, Sigma-Aldrich), mouse monoclonal anti-HA.11 antibody (clone 16B12, Covance), rabbit polyclonal anti-Fam-38b antibody (HPA031974,
Sigma-Aldrich), HRP-conjugated goat anti-mouse
antibody (ab97265, Abcam) and HRP-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antibody
(111-036-003, Jackson ImmunoResearch).
Statistical analysis
The collection of stimulus–response data generates data sets with
variation in both x and y. In order to effectively compare groups
for each cell studied, we binned response data by stimulus size in the following
bins: 0–10, 10–50, 50–100, 100–250,
250–500 and 500–1,000. For each cell, current amplitudes
within each bin were averaged and then bins were averaged between cells. We then
tested for significance by testing whether the current amplitude for a given
stimulation range (that is, bin) differed between samples. A power analysis was
used to determine that moderate to strong effects between samples could be
detected with a sample size >4. Most data sets were in excess of this
number.All data sets were tested for normality. All normally distributed data sets were
compared using a two-tailed Student’s t-test. For
nonparametric data, the Mann–Whitney U test was used. In both cases
tests were two-sided. In all cases, *P<0.05;
**P<0.01 and ***P<0.001. Categorical data were
compared using a χ2 test. Survival curves were
compared using a two-way analysis of variance, and Bonferroni post-tests were
used to compare individual points.
Author contributions
Positive masters for casting pillar arrays were microfabricated by H.-D.N., and L.L.
made all of the plasmid constructs. RT–PCR and CO-IPs were conducted by
R.H. All other experimental work and analyses were conducted by K.P. K.P. and G.R.L.
designed the experiments and wrote the paper. The authors declare no competing
financial interests.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Poole, K. et al. Tuning Piezo ion channels to
detect molecular-scale movements relevant for fine touch. Nat. Commun. 5:3520
doi: 10.1038/ncomms4520 (2014).
Supplementary Figures, Tables and References
Supplementary Figures 1-10, Supplementary Tables 1-7 and Supplementary
References
Supplementary Movie 1
Movie compiled from successive images of pillar array as the piezo-driven
glass rod deflects a single pilus underneath an attached neurite. The
diameter of each individual pilus is 3.6 μm.
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