| Literature DB >> 30639111 |
Guillaume Jacquemet1, Aki Stubb2, Rafael Saup2, Mitro Miihkinen2, Elena Kremneva3, Hellyeh Hamidi2, Johanna Ivaska4.
Abstract
Filopodia are adhesive cellular protrusions specialized in the detection of extracellular matrix (ECM)-derived cues. Although ECM engagement at focal adhesions is known to trigger the recruitment of hundreds of proteins ("adhesome") to fine-tune cellular behavior, the components of the filopodia adhesions remain undefined. Here, we performed a structured-illumination-microscopy-based screen to map the localization of 80 target proteins, linked to cell adhesion and migration, within myosin-X-induced filopodia. We demonstrate preferential enrichment of several adhesion proteins to either filopodia tips, filopodia shafts, or shaft subdomains, suggesting divergent, spatially restricted functions for these proteins. Moreover, proteins with phosphoinositide (PI) binding sites are particularly enriched in filopodia. This, together with the strong localization of PI(3,4)P2 in filopodia tips, predicts critical roles for PIs in regulating filopodia ultra-structure and function. Our mapping further reveals that filopodia adhesions consist of a unique set of proteins, the filopodome, that are distinct from classical nascent adhesions, focal adhesions, and fibrillar adhesions. Using live imaging, we observe that filopodia adhesions can give rise to nascent adhesions, which, in turn, form focal adhesions. We demonstrate that p130Cas (BCAR1) is recruited to filopodia tips via its C-terminal Cas family homology domain (CCHD) and acts as a mechanosensitive regulator of filopodia stability. Finally, we demonstrate that our map based on myosin-X-induced filopodia can be translated to endogenous filopodia and fascin- and IRSp53-mediated filopodia.Entities:
Keywords: SIM; adhesion; filopodia; filopodia tip adhesion; filopodome; integrin; mechanotransduction; p130Cas; stiffness
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30639111 PMCID: PMC6345628 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.11.053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834
Figure 1Mapping Adhesion Proteins to Filopodia Using Structured Illumination Microscopy
(A–C) U2OS cells expressing a GFP/RFP-tagged protein of interest (POI) and GFP/RFP-MYO10 were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, stained for F-actin, and imaged using structured illumination microscopy (SIM). POI distribution within filopodia (from tip to base) was assessed with line intensity profiles (n numbers can be found in Data S1).
(A) An example illustrating the distribution of GFP-TLN1 (talin-1), MYO10-mScarlet (myosin-X), and F-actin within filopodia. Blue square highlights the region of interest (ROI) that is magnified; scale bars: (main) 10 μm; (inset) 1 μm; yellow line was used to measure the TLN1, MYO10, and F-actin intensity profiles.
(B) Results of the line intensity profiles from (A).
(C) The percentage of filopodia positive for each POI as determined from line intensity profiles. Colored circles indicate POI inclusion in the Geiger adhesome [3] (red circle) and/or the consensus adhesome [4] (blue circle) and/or accumulation in focal adhesions (FAs) (this study, yellow circle); “core filopodia proteins” and “accessory filopodia proteins” are labeled.
See also Data S1 and S2.
Figure 2Generation of a Filopodia Map Using Correlative Imaging and Intensity Profile Averaging
Heatmap demonstrating the subcellular localization of each POI within filopodia based on >250 intensity profiles (measured as in Figure 1; n numbers can be found in Data S1). POIs are labeled using their official human gene name. To create this map, intensity profiles of each POI were binned (40 bins per filopodium for each intensity profile) and then averaged (see STAR Methods for more details) and displayed as a heatmap. POIs are labeled using their official human gene name; filopodium tip (defined by MYO10) and filopodium shaft are highlighted. See also Figure S1 and Data S1 and S2.
Figure 3Mapping of Phosphoinositides within Filopodia
(A) Functional annotation analysis (protein domain enrichments) of the core filopodia proteins (detected in ≥60% of filopodia) was performed using the INTERPRO database integrated within the Database for Annotation, Visualization, and Integrated Discovery (DAVID) platform.
(B) Distribution of phosphoinositides (PIs) in filopodia. U2OS cells transiently expressing MYO10-mScarlet and GFP-tagged probes, binding with high affinity to a single PI species (PI species, probe used; PI(3)P, GFP-FYVE-PH; PI(4)P, GFP-P4M; PI(4,5)P2, GFP-PLC(δ1)-PH; PI(3,4,5)P3, GFP-BTK-PH; PI(3,4)P2, GFP-TAPP-PH), were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, fixed, stained for F-actin, and imaged using SIM. Maximum intensity projections (MIPs) are displayed; scale bars: (main) 20 μm; (inset) 2 μm; yellow arrows highlight filopodia tips.
(C) The distribution of each probe within filopodia was then analyzed and displayed as described in Figures 1 and 2.
(D) U2OS cells expressing Lifeact-mTurquoise2, GFP-TAPP-PH, and MYO10-mScarlet were plated on fibronectin and imaged live using an Airyscan confocal microscope (1 picture every 9 s; Video S1). Scale bars: (main) 15 μm; (inset) 5 μm.
(E) RAT2 cells expressing GFP-TAPP-PH were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, stained for F-actin, and imaged using SIM. A representative MIP is displayed; scale bars: (main) 20 μm; (inset) 2 μm; yellow arrows highlight filopodia tips.
See also Data S1 and S2.
Figure 4Preferential Enrichment of Adhesion Proteins to Filopodium Shaft or Tip
The preferential recruitment of core filopodia proteins to filopodia tips or shafts was assessed by calculating an enrichment ratio (averaged intensity at filopodium tip versus shaft). Results are displayed as Tukey boxplots using a logarithmic scale, and the POIs are ordered as a function of the median enrichment score. Enrichment scores of F-actin and the plasma membrane (labeled by CAAX-GFP) are highlighted in orange. A median enrichment score displaying ≥two-fold change over that of the plasma membrane was considered to represent strong POI enrichment to either filopodia tips (≥two-fold increase, highlighted in green) or to filopodia shafts (≥two-fold decrease, highlighted in blue). Statistically significant enrichment scores are noted as either “increased in filopodia tips” or “increased in filopodia shafts.” See also Data S1 and S2.
Figure 5Filopodia Tip Adhesions
(A) U2OS cells expressing Lifeact-mTurquoise2, PXN-mEmerald, and MYO10-mScarlet were plated on fibronectin and imaged live using an Airyscan confocal microscope (1 picture every 30 s; scale bar, 5 μm; Video S2). Images highlight time points of interest in a magnified area; yellow arrows highlight filopodia tips.
(B) U2OS cells expressing MYO10-mScarlet were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr; stained for F-actin, phospho-BCAR1 (Y410), and endogenous PXN; and imaged using SIM. A representative MIP is displayed. The blue and yellow squares highlight ROIs, which are magnified; scale bars: (main) 20 μm; (inset) 2 μm.
(C–E) Live-cell imaging of U2OS cells transiently expressing MYO10-mScarlet together with either Lifeact-mTurquoise2 and BCAR1-eGFP (C; Video S3), Lifeact-mTurquoise2 and TLN1-eGFP (D; Video S4), or ITGA5-GFP (E; Video S5). Cells were plated on fibronectin and imaged live using an Airyscan confocal microscope. Yellow arrows highlight filopodia tips; scale bars: 5 μm.
(F) U2OS cells expressing MYO10-mScarlet together with either GFP-BCAR1 full-length (FL), BCAR1 deletion constructs, or GFP-PTK2-FAT (PTK2FAT) were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, stained for F-actin, and imaged using SIM. BCAR1ΔSH3, BCAR1 SH3 domain deletion; BCAR1ΔCCHD, BCAR1 CCHD domain deletion; BCAR1ΔCCHDΔSH3, BCAR1 SH3 domain and CCHD deletion; BCAR1CCHD, BCAR1 CCHD domain alone. Images highlight magnified areas of interest; scale bar: 2 μm; full fields of view are available in Figure S4. Distribution of each construct within filopodia was analyzed and displayed as described in Figures 1 and 2.
See also Figures S2, S3, and S4.
Figure 6BCAR1 Regulates Environment Sensing at Filopodia Tips
(A) Efficiency of siRNA-mediated (oligos nos. 5 and 6) silencing of BCAR1 in U2OS cells.
(B and C) BCAR1-silenced (oligos nos. 5 and 6) U2OS (B) and MDA-MB-231 (C) cells transiently expressing MYO10-GFP were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, fixed, and the number of MYO10-positive filopodia per cell was quantified (n > 65 cells, three biological repeats; ∗∗∗p value < 5.4 × 10−6).
(D) BCAR1-silenced (oligo no. 6) U2OS cells transiently expressing MYO10-mScarlet together with GFP, GFP-BCAR1, or GFP-BCAR1ΔCCHD were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, fixed, and the number of MYO10-positive filopodia per cell was quantified (n > 69 cells, three biological repeats; ∗∗∗p value < 1.1 × 10−5).
(E) BCAR1-silenced (oligo no. 6) U2OS cells transiently expressing MYO10-GFP were plated on fibronectin and imaged live using an Airyscan confocal microscope (1 picture every 5 s; scale bar, 20 μm). Representative images at different time points are shown. For each condition, MYO10-positive particles were automatically tracked, and MYO10 spot lifetime (calculated as a percentage of the total number of filopodia generated per cell) was plotted and displayed as Tukey boxplots (see STAR Methods for details; three biological repeats, more than 40 cells per condition, ∗∗∗p value < 8.78 × 10−5).
(F–H) U2OS cells expressing MYO10-mScarlet (F) or MYO10-GFP (G and H) were plated on fibronectin-coated polyacrylamide gels of defined stiffness (0.5 kPa, soft; 50 kPa, stiff) for 2 hr.
(F) Cells were stained for F-actin and phospho-BCAR1 (Y410) and imaged using a spinning disk confocal microscope. MIPs are displayed; yellow squares highlight ROI, which are magnified; yellow arrows highlight filopodia tips; scale bars: (main) 20 μm; (inset) 5 μm.
(G) Cells were stained for F-actin, imaged using an Airyscan confocal microscope, and the number of MYO10-positive filopodia per cell was quantified (n > 81 cells, three biological repeats; ∗∗∗p value < 5.5 × 10−20). MIPs are displayed in Figure S5C.
(H) Live-cell imaging on an Airyscan confocal microscope (scale bars: 20 μm). Representative images at different time points are shown. For each condition, MYO10 spot lifetime was analyzed as in (E) (three biological repeats, more than 34 cells per condition; ∗∗∗p value < 9.4 × 10−4).
See also Figure S5 and Data S1 and S2.
Figure 7ECM Sensing in Distinct Filopodia Types
(A) RAT2 cells expressing BCAR1-GFP were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, and their endogenous filopodia were stained for F-actin and imaged using SIM. A representative MIP is displayed.
(B–D) Cells were plated on fibronectin (B, RAT2 cells, 2 hr; C, MCF10DCIS.com, 2 hr; D, U2OS, 20 min) fixed, stained for F-actin and phospho-BCAR1 (Y410), and endogenous filopodia imaged using SIM. Representative MIPs are displayed.
(E–G) U2OS cells expressing GFP-FSCN1 (E), GFP-BAIP2 (F), or GFP-FMNL3 (G; all known filopodia-inducing proteins) were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, stained for F-actin and phospho-BCAR1 (Y410), and imaged using SIM. Representative MIPs are displayed.
(H) U2OS cells expressing GFP-FMNL3 and mCherry-TLN2 were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, stained for F-actin, and imaged using SIM. A representative MIP is displayed.
(I) Live-cell imaging of U2OS cells transiently expressing Lifeact-mTurquoise2 and MYO10-GFP or Lifeact-mTurquoise2 and FMNL3-GFP (Video S6). Cells plated on fibronectin were imaged live using an Airyscan confocal microscope. Images display a time point of interest as well as color-coded time projections. Scale bars: 20 μm.
(J and K) U2OS cells expressing GFP-FMNL3 (J) or GFP-MYO10 (K) were plated on fibronectin for 2 hr, fixed and stained for F-actin together with inactive (clone 4b4) or active (clone 12G10) β1 integrin, and imaged using SIM. MIPs are displayed.
For all panels, the yellow squares highlight ROIs, which are magnified; yellow arrows highlight filopodia tips; scale bars: (main) 20 μm; (inset) 2 μm. See also Figure S6.
| REAGENT or RESOURCE | SOURCE | IDENTIFIER |
|---|---|---|
| Mouse anti-human active β1 integrin 12G10 (1:100 for IF) | Abcam | catalog number: ab30394; RRID: |
| Mouse anti-human inactive β1 integrin monoclonal 4B4 (1:200 for IF) | Beckman Coulter | catalog number: 6603113; RRID: |
| Mouse monoclonal anti-p130Cas (BCAR1, 1:100 for IF, 1:1000 for WB) | Santa Cruz Biotechnology | catalog number: SC-20029; RRID: |
| Mouse monoclonal anti-talin-1 (TLN1, clone 8d4, 1:100 for IF) | Sigma | catalog number: T3287; RRID: |
| Mouse monoclonal anti-FAK (PTK2, Clone 77, 1:100 for IF) | BD Biosciences | catalog number: 610087; RRID: |
| Mouse monoclonal anti-α-tubulin (clone 12G10, 1:1000 for WB) | The Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank | catalog number: 12G10; AB_1157911 |
| Mouse monoclonal anti-paxillin (PXN, Clone 349, 1:100 for IF) | BD Biosciences | catalog number: 610051; RRID: |
| Rabbit polyclonal antibody raised against Phospho-p130Cas (BCAR1, Tyr410) | Cell signaling | catalog number: 4011; RRID: |
| Rabbit monoclonal antibody raised against human ILK (clone EPR1592; 1:100 for IF) | Abcam | catalog number: ab76468; RRID: |
| SiR-actin | Cytoskeleton | catalog number: CY-SC001 |
| Bovine plasma fibronectin | Merck | catalog number: 341631 |
| Dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: D2650 |
| SRC inhibitor (PP2) | Selleckchem | catalog number: S7008 |
| FAK (PTK2) inhibitor (PF-573228) | Selleckchem | catalog number: S2013 |
| The myosin II inhibitor blebbistatin | STEMCELL Technologies | catalog number: 72402 |
| Lipofectamine 3000 and the P3000TM Enhancer Reagent | Thermo Fisher Scientific | catalog number: L3000015 |
| Human EGF | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: E9644 |
| Hydrocortisone | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: H0888-1G |
| Cholera toxin | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: C8052-1MG |
| Insulin | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: I9278-5ML |
| Penicillin/streptomycin | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: P0781-100ML |
| Silane A-174 | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: 440159-100ML |
| Acrylamide solution | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: A4058 |
| N, N′-Methylenebisacrylamide solution | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: M1533 |
| TEMED | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: T9281 |
| Sulfo-SANPAH | Thermo Scientific | catalog number: 22589 |
| N-(3-Dimethylaminopropyl)-N’ ethylcarbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC) | Sigma-Aldrich | catalog number: 03450 |
| U2OS osteosarcoma cells | Leibniz Institute DSMZ-German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, Braunschweig DE | |
| MDA-MB-231 triple-negative human breast adenocarcinoma | ATCC | catalog number: HTB-26 |
| MCF10 DCIS.COM | N/A | |
| RAT2 cells (Rat embryonic fibroblasts) | ATCC | catalog number: CRL-1764 |
| The siRNA used as control (siCTRL) was Allstars negative control siRNA. | QIAGEN | catalog number: 1027281 |
| siBCAR1#5 (Hs_BCAR1_5) | QIAGEN | catalog number: SI02757734 |
| siBCAR1#6 (Hs_BCAR1_6) | QIAGEN | catalog number: SI02757741 |
| eGFP-TNS1 | Previous study [ | N/A |
| eGFP-TNS2 | Previous study [ | N/A |
| eGFP-TNS3 | Previous study [ | N/A |
| eGFP-TNS4 | Previous study [ | N/A |
| GFP-Sharpin | Previous study [ | N/A |
| GFP-MDGI | Previous study [ | N/A |
| GFP-FAK-FAT | David D. Schlaepfer (UC San Diego Health, US) | N/A |
| GFP-FL-FAK | David D. Schlaepfer (UC San Diego Health, US) | N/A |
| EFHD2-GFP | Dirk Mielenz (University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, DE) [ | N/A |
| CAAX-GFP | Gregory Giannone (Bordeaux University, FR) | N/A |
| EGFP-Talin-1 | Ben Goult (University of Kent, UK) | N/A |
| mCherry-Talin-2 | Ben Goult (University of Kent, UK) | N/A |
| pDsRedC1-Kindlin-1 | Ben Goult (University of Kent, UK) | N/A |
| FMNL2-GFP | Robert Grosse (University of Marburg, DE) [ | N/A |
| FMNL3-GFP | Henry Higgs (Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, US) [ | N/A |
| PPFIA1-GFP | Guido Serini (University of Torino, IT) | N/A |
| pEGFP-C1-Lamellipodin | Matthias Krause (King’s College London, UK) [ | N/A |
| pEGFP-C2-Myo15a | Jonathan Bird (NIH, Bethesda US) [ | N/A |
| GFP-ICAP-1 | Daniel Bouvard (University of Grenoble, FR) | N/A |
| GFP-KANK1 | Reinhard Fässler (Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried, DE) [ | N/A |
| GFP-KANK2 | Reinhard Fässler (Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried, DE) [ | N/A |
| GFP-KANK3 | Reinhard Fässler (Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried, DE) [ | N/A |
| GFP-KANK4 | Reinhard Fässler (Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried, DE) [ | N/A |
| BTK-PH-EGFP | Matthias Wymann (University of Basel, Switzerland) | N/A |
| PLC(δ1)-PH-EGFP | Matthias Wymann (University of Basel, Switzerland) | N/A |
| EGFP-tagged tandem FYVE | Harald Stenmark (Oslo University Hospital) [ | N/A |
| GFP-Cas-wt | Daniel Rösel (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic) [ | N/A |
| GFP-CasdeltaCCH | Daniel Rösel (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic) [ | N/A |
| GFP-CasdeltaSH3 | Daniel Rösel (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic) [ | N/A |
| GFP-Cas-deltaCCH-deltaSH3 | Daniel Rösel (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic) [ | N/A |
| Kindlin-2-GFP | Maddy Parsons (King’s College London, UK) | N/A |
| Ezrin-GFP | Maddy Parsons (King’s College London, UK) | N/A |
| Vinculin-GFP | Maddy Parsons (King’s College London, UK) | N/A |
| Moesin-GFP | Buzz Baum (University College London, UK) | N/A |
| Lifeact-mTurquoise2 | Joachim Goedhart (University of Amsterdam, NL) [ | N/A |
| Integrin alpha5-GFP | Rick Horwitz (Allen institute for cell science, US) | N/A |
| mEmerald-Alpha-Actinin-19 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 53989 |
| mEmerald-Fascin-C-10 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54094 |
| pGFP Cas | Addgene (Kenneth Yamada) | catalog number: 50729 |
| mEmerald-Cofilin-C-10 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54047 |
| mEmerald-Coronin1B-C-10 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54049 |
| pGFP CrkII | Addgene (Kenneth Yamada) | catalog number: 50730 |
| mEmerald-Cortactin-C-12 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54051 |
| mEmerald-mDia1-C-14 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54156 |
| mEmerald-mDia2-C-14 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54158 |
| mEmerald-Migfilin-C-14 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54181 |
| pEGFP-IQGAP1 | Addgene (David Sacks) [ | catalog number: 30112 |
| mEmerald-LASP1-C-10 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54141 |
| EGFP-EPLIN alpha | Addgene (Elizabeth Luna) | catalog number: 40947 |
| EGFP-EPLIN beta | Addgene (Elizabeth Luna) | catalog number: 40948 |
| mEmerald-PINCH-C-14 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54229 |
| mEmerald-MyosinIIA-C-18 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) [ | catalog number: 54190 |
| mEmerald-MyosinIIB-C-18 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54192 |
| mEmerald-Palladin-C-7 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54213 |
| mEmerald-Parvin-C-14 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54214 |
| GFP-PTEN | Addgene (Alonzo Ross) [ | catalog number: 13039 |
| mEmerald-Paxillin-22 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) [ | catalog number: 54219 |
| mEmerald-TES-C-14 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54276 |
| mEmerald-VASP-N-10 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54297 |
| mEmerald-Zyxin-6 | Addgene (Michael Davidson) | catalog number: 54319 |
| E-cadherin-GFP | Addgene (Jennifer Stow) [ | catalog number: 28009 |
| pEGFP C1-Eps8 WT | Addgene (Giorgio Scita) [ | catalog number: 74950 |
| GFP-P4M-SidM | Addgene (Tamas Balla) [ | catalog number: 51469 |
| pcDNA3.1-6His-MyoX | Addgene (Emanuel Strehler) [ | catalog number: 47607 |
| ARP3-GFP | Addgene (Matthew Welch) [ | catalog number: 8462 |
| mScarlet-MYO10 | This study ( | N/A |
| pEGFP-CasCCHD | This study ( | N/A |
| mEmerald-MYO7A | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-BAIAP2 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-PDLIM5 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-FERMT2 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-FHL2 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-FHL3 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-PDLIM7 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-PLS3 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-TRIP6 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-ALYREF | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-ANXA1 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-BRIX1 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-DIMT1 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-FAU | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-HP1BP3 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-PCOLCE | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-POLDIP3 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-SERPINE1 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-SORBS1 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-TGM2 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-P4HB | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-PDLIM1 | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-SYNCRIP | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-NISCH | This study | N/A |
| mEmerald-PRSS23 | This study | N/A |
| Filopodia mapping | This study ( | N/A |
| RStudio (1.0.153) | Foundation for Open Access Statistics. | |
| DAVID platform | [ | |
| BoxPlotR | [ | |
| PlotsOfData | [ | |
| Fiji | [ | |
| Fiji plugin TrackMate | [ | |
| MATLAB (R2018b) | MathWorks | |
| TFM analysis (MATLAB software) | Timo Betz (University of Münster) [ | N/A |
| Glass-bottom dishes, High Tolerance 1.5 coverslip | MatTek Corporation | catalog number: |
| Glass-bottom dishes, 1.0 coverslip | MatTek Corporation | catalog number: P35G-1.0-14-C |
| Polyacrylamide gels of defined stiffness; 0.5 kPa | Matrigen | catalog number: SV3510-EC-0.5 |
| Polyacrylamide gels of defined stiffness; 50 kPa | Matrigen | catalog number: SV3510-EC-50 |
| VECTASHIELD | Vector laboratories | catalog number: H-1000 |
| FluoSpheres (505/515) | Life Technologies | catalog number: F881 |
| Horse serum | GIBCO BRL | catalog number: 16050-122 |