| Literature DB >> 32640571 |
Chad M Hobson1, Andrew D Stephens2.
Abstract
Cell nuclei are paramount for both cellular function and mechanical stability. These two roles of nuclei are intertwined as altered mechanical properties of nuclei are associated with altered cell behavior and disease. To further understand the mechanical properties of cell nuclei and guide future experiments, many investigators have turned to mechanical modeling. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of mechanical modeling of cell nuclei with an emphasis on the role of the nuclear lamina in hopes of spurring future growth of this field. The goal of this review is to provide an introduction to mechanical modeling techniques, highlight current applications to nuclear mechanics, and give insight into future directions of mechanical modeling. There are three main classes of mechanical models-schematic, continuum mechanics, and molecular dynamics-which provide unique advantages and limitations. Current experimental understanding of the roles of the cytoskeleton, the nuclear lamina, and the chromatin in nuclear mechanics provide the basis for how each component is subsequently treated in mechanical models. Modeling allows us to interpret assay-specific experimental results for key parameters and quantitatively predict emergent behaviors. This is specifically powerful when emergent phenomena, such as lamin-based strain stiffening, can be deduced from complimentary experimental techniques. Modeling differences in force application, geometry, or composition can additionally clarify seemingly conflicting experimental results. Using these approaches, mechanical models have informed our understanding of relevant biological processes such as migration, nuclear blebbing, nuclear rupture, and cell spreading and detachment. There remain many aspects of nuclear mechanics for which additional mechanical modeling could provide immediate insight. Although mechanical modeling of cell nuclei has been employed for over a decade, there are still relatively few models for any given biological phenomenon. This implies that an influx of research into this realm of the field has the potential to dramatically shape both future experiments and our current understanding of nuclear mechanics, function, and disease.Entities:
Keywords: chromatin; continuum; cytoskeleton; discrete; lamins; modeling; nuclear mechanics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32640571 PMCID: PMC7408412 DOI: 10.3390/cells9071623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1(A) Common components for 1D viscoelastic schematic models where is the force across a given element, is the spring constant, is the viscosity, is displacement, and is velocity. (B) A continuum mechanics (CM) model of atomic force microscopy where the nucleus is treated as an elastic solid surrounded by a thin, elastic shell. The axes represent distance in μm. Force versus indentation data show strain stiffening during compression where the small indentation regime is dictated by the elastic solid and the large indentation regime is dominated by stretching of the elastic shell. Reprinted with permission from Hobson et al. (2020) [7]. (C) A molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of micromanipulation of an isolated nucleus. The nucleus is modeled to have a crosslinked polymeric interior that is linked to a polymeric shell. The presence of the polymer interior dictates the initial force response while the shell results in a strain-stiffening response during long extension. Reprinted with permission from Stephens et al. (2017) [8].
A summary of the primary advantages and limitations of the three classes of models.
| Model Type | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Schematic | Easily solved analytically | Not specific to nuclei, but rather applied to nuclear mechanics data |
| Continuum Mechanics (CM) | Can be solved either computationally or analytically | Assume each material to be continuous, thus limiting the ability to model polymeric structures or variations in protein concentration |
| Molecular Dynamics (MD) | Quasi molecular-scale modeling of nuclear constituents gives a more accurate representation of the polymeric structures | Computationally intensive due to quasi molecular-scale modeling |
Figure 2(A) A schematic of a whole cell. (B) A close-up, cross-section schematic of the ventral half of the cell drawn in (A). The proteins, structures, and interactions are a subset of the full system, but are historically those which are relevant to consider when developing a mechanical model for nuclei.
Summary of nucleus-specific mechanical models. Column 1 additionally provides the class of model. CM-A: analytically-solved continuum mechanics model. CM-C: computationally-solved continuum mechanics model. MD: molecular dynamics model.
| Assay or Phenomenon | Cytoskeletal Component | Lamin Component | Chromatin Component | Simulation Conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFM (CM-C) | N/A | Elastic Shell | Elastic Solid | Nuclei exhibit strain stiffening in AFM | [ |
| AFM (CM-C) | N/A | Elastic Shell | Viscoelastic Solid | Including the nuclear envelope is necessary to recapitulate the magnitude and shape of experimental force versus indentation curves on cells | [ |
| AFM (CM-C) | N/A | N/A | Poroelastic | Nuclei exhibit depth-dependent relaxation rates, consistent with poroelastic materials | [ |
| AFM (CM-C) | N/A | Elastic Shell | Elastic Solid (radially decaying Elastic Modulus) | A radially decaying elastic modulus recapitulates experimentally determined depth-dependent elastic moduli | [ |
| Micropipette Aspiration (CM-C) | N/A | Elastic Shell | Viscoelastic Solid | Micropipette aspiration measurements are highly sensitive to the stiffness of the nuclear lamina | [ |
| Micromanipulation (MD) | N/A | Polymer Shell | Confined Polymer | Nuclear lamina buckles with lack of chromatin | [ |
| Plate Compression (CM-C) | N/A | Elastic Shell | Viscoelastoplastic | Lower stiffness of the nuclear lamina increases nuclear plasticity | [ |
| Plate Compression (CM-C) | Hyperelastic | N/A | Hyperelastic | Force response is dependent on cell and nuclear geometry, with spread cells appearing stiffer than round cells, both of which appear stiffer than isolated nuclei | [ |
| Actin Compression (CM-A) | Uniform compressive plate | Elastic Shell | N/A | Provide equations linking nuclear shape to applied force and elastic modulus | [ |
| Substrate Stretching and the Actin Cap (CM-C) | Shear deformable beams | N/A | Elastic Solid | Stress concentrates along the edges of the nucleus in absence of actin cap | [ |
| Constricted Migration (CM-A) | N/A |
Elastic Shell N/A |
Inviscid Fluid Elastic Solid | Provide relationship between mechanical properties and active processes for migration | [ |
| Constricted Migration (CM-C) | Driving force for migration | Hyperelastic Shell | Poroelastic | Resistance to transmigration is dependent on extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness, pore size, and lamin A/C stiffness | [ |
| Constricted Migration (CM-C) | N/A | N/A | Hyperelastic Solid | There exists a critical force a cell must overcome to enter a constricted pore | [ |
| Constricted Migration (CM-C) | Driving force for migration, viscoelastic | Viscoelastic Shell | Elastoplastic | Nuclear softening increases invasiveness | [ |
| Nuclear Blebbing (MD) | N/A | Two-Polymer Shell | N/A | Retraction of blebs with only A-type lamins follow a double-exponential decay | [ |
| Shape Fluctuations and Nuclear Blebbing (MD) | Point particles connected to lamina via springs | Polymer Shell | Confined Polymer | Tethering between chromatin and nuclear lamina is necessary for bleb formation | [ |
| Nuclear Blebbing (CM-C) | N/A | Two-Material Elastic Shell | N/A | Larger mesh size of A-type lamins relative to B-type lamins is required to form nuclear blebs | [ |
| Nuclear Rupture and Chromatin Herniation (CM-A) | N/A | Viscoelastic Shell | Semi-Flexible Polymer | Rupture site radius increases exponentially to a critical value before closing linearly in time | [ |
| Nuclear Rupture (CM-A) | N/A | Elastic layer with and without nuclear pore complexes | N/A | Develops scaling laws between hole nucleation rate and strain on the lamina for homogenous and heterogeneous lamina layers | [ |
| Nuclear Rupture (CM-C) | Fluid | N/A | Fluid | Rate of outflow of nuclear contents correlates with the diameter of the rupture site | [ |
| DNA Damage (CM-A) | N/A | N/A | Elastic-Fluid | Separation of repair proteins from the chromatin resulting in delayed repair is sufficient to recapitulate experimental observation of increased DNA damage in constricted migration | [ |
| Cell Detachment and Attachment (CM-C) | Compressive plate | Hyperelastic Shell | N/A | Higher pressure and thinner nuclear lamina increase wrinkling of detached nuclei | [ |
| Cell Spreading, Geometric Constraints * (CM-C) | Provide compressive stress | Stiffening filamentous network | Elastic Solid | Cell geometry alters local stresses which regulate nuclear architecture and mechanics | [ |
| Cell Spreading (CM-C) | Compressive contractile network | Elastic Shell | Elastic Solid | Cell spreading is necessary and sufficient to drive nuclear flattening | [ |
* This work features several different models for which a full description is outside the scope of this table.