| Literature DB >> 31073958 |
Yunfeng Chen1, Zhiyong Li2, Lining Arnold Ju3,4,5.
Abstract
Receptor-mediated cell mechanosensing plays critical roles in cell spreading, migration, growth, and survival. Dynamic force spectroscopy (DFS) techniques have recently been advanced to visualize such processes, which allow the concurrent examination of molecular binding dynamics and cellular response to mechanical stimuli on single living cells. Notably, the live-cell DFS is able to manipulate the force "waveforms" such as tensile versus compressive, ramped versus clamped, static versus dynamic, and short versus long lasting forces, thereby deriving correlations of cellular responses with ligand binding kinetics and mechanical stimulation profiles. Here, by differentiating extracellular mechanical stimulations into two major categories, tensile force and compressive force, we review the latest findings on receptor-mediated mechanosensing mechanisms that are discovered by the state-of-the-art live-cell DFS technologies.Keywords: Dynamic force spectroscopy; Force waveform; Mechanosensing; Receptor–ligand interactions
Year: 2019 PMID: 31073958 PMCID: PMC6557935 DOI: 10.1007/s12551-019-00536-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biophys Rev ISSN: 1867-2450