| Literature DB >> 30780372 |
Mukund Gupta1,2, Bryant L Doss1, Leyla Kocgozlu1, Meng Pan1, René-Marc Mège2, Andrew Callan-Jones3, Raphaël Voituriez4,5, Benoît Ladoux1,2.
Abstract
A general trait of living cells is their ability to exert contractile stresses on their surroundings and thus respond to substrate rigidity. At the cellular scale, this response affects cell shape, polarity, and ultimately migration. The regulation of cell shape together with rigidity sensing remains largely unknown. In this article we show that both substrate rigidity and cell shape contribute to drive actin organization and cell polarity. Increasing substrate rigidity affects bulk properties of the actin cytoskeleton by favoring long-lived actin stress fibers with increased nematic interactions, whereas cell shape imposes a local alignment of actin fibers at the cell periphery.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30780372 PMCID: PMC6464093 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.99.012412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev E ISSN: 2470-0045 Impact factor: 2.529