| Literature DB >> 26141078 |
Ewa K Paluch1, Celeste M Nelson2, Nicolas Biais3, Ben Fabry4, Jens Moeller5, Beth L Pruitt6, Carina Wollnik7, Galina Kudryasheva7, Florian Rehfeldt7, Walter Federle8.
Abstract
Mechanotransduction - how cells sense physical forces and translate them into biochemical and biological responses - is a vibrant and rapidly-progressing field, and is important for a broad range of biological phenomena. This forum explores the role of mechanotransduction in a variety of cellular activities and highlights intriguing questions that deserve further attention.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26141078 PMCID: PMC4491211 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-015-0150-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1.Hooke's law for linear elastic engineering materials compared to complex material models for biological specimens. The ratio between applied stress σ (force/area) and resulting strain ε (deformation) is described by the elastic modulus E for homogenous, isotropic, linear elastic materials. For biological specimens, the material model assumptions are more difficult and depend on the specific system. Proteins, cells and tissues consist of multiple heterogeneous, anisotropic building blocks of various length scales that are hierarchically organized and exhibit rate-dependent, non-linear, viscoelastic stress–strain responses. Comparison of mechanical properties across systems and among different testing methods requires careful assessment of testing conditions and calibration schemes, which are not yet standardized
Fig. 2.Acto-myosin stress fibers are key mechanical regulators in cell-matrix mechanosensing. a Sketch of a cell adhering to a substrate of elasticity E. Actomyosin stress fibers (magnified in the inset zoom) are connected via focal adhesions and extracellular matrix proteins to the micro-environment and generate contractile forces that enable the cell to sense the mechanical properties of the substrate. The cytoskeleton is also connected to the nuclear lamina, thus providing a direct mechanical route to gene regulation. Adapted from [67] with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry. b Non-monotonic dependence of stress fiber structure quantified by an order parameter S of hMSCs grown on substrates of different elasticity E can be used as early morphological marker for mechano-guided differentiation. Scale bar is 50 μm. Adapted from [70] with permission from the Nature Publishing Group
Fig. 3.Surface adhesion in climbing animals and cells. a Weaver ant (Oecophylla smaragdina) carrying more than 100 times its body weight upside-down on a smooth surface (photo: Thomas Endlein). b Tokay gecko (Gekko gecko) attached by a single toe to a tilted glass surface. Reproduced from [130] with permission from the Journal of Experimental Biology. c Lateral view of adhesive setae in a longhorn beetle (Clytus arietis) showing non-adhesive orientation of seta tips and anti-adhesive corrugations on the dorsal side. Reproduced from [131] with permission from the Journal of Experimental Biology. d Weaver ant adhesive pad in the retracted (top) and the extended position (bottom). Reproduced from [114]. e Adherent cell on a deformable substrate. Inward forces are transmitted via the cytoskeleton and the focal adhesions to the substrate. Adapted from [75]. f Rapid increase in adhesive contact area in stick insects (Carausius morosus) in response to a rapid displacement of the substrate. Adapted from [121]. g B16 melanoma cell (expressing fluorescent marker for focal adhesions) before and 5 minutes after displacement of cell body by a microneedle (direction shown by arrow), showing growth of peripheral focal contacts in the region opposite the cell body (enlarged in insets), stimulated by tension. Reproduced from [123] with permission from the Journal of Cell Science
Shear and adhesive strength of animal adhesive pads in comparison with single cells
| Strength (kPa) | Source | |
|---|---|---|
| Shear forces | ||
| Gecko seta: real contact area | 53,300 | [ |
| Gecko seta: projected contact area | 2,880 | |
| Beetle pad: real contact area | 681 | [ |
| Beetle pad: projected contact area | 259 | |
| Weaver ants | 405 | [ |
| Stick insects | 299 | [ |
| Barnacles | 10-300 | [ |
| Fibroblast cells (whole) | 0.048 | [ |
| Fibroblast cells (focal contacts) | 5.5 | [ |
| Adhesion | ||
| Gecko seta: real contact area | 10,700 | [ |
| Gecko seta: projected contact area | 576 | |
| Beetle pad: real contact area | 86.9 | [ |
| Beetle pad: projected contact area | 35.5 | |
| Stick insect pad | 44.6 | [ |
| Barnacles | 100-1000 | [ |
| Ants | ~50 | [ |
| Endothelial cells | 0.56-1.1 | [ |