4.7 Article

Human neutrophil surface protrusion under a point load: location independence and viscoelasticity

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 295, Issue 5, Pages C1434-C1444

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00136.2008

Keywords

leukocyte rolling; optical trap; cell adhesion; microvillus; micropipette aspiration

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 HL-069947, R21/R33 RR-017014]

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Xu G, Shao J. Human neutrophil surface protrusion under a point load: location independence and viscoelasticity. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 295: C1434-C1444, 2008. First published September 24, 2008; doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.00136.2008.-Mechanical properties of neutrophils have been recognized as key contributors to stabilizing neutrophil rolling on the endothelium during the inflammatory response. In particular, accumulating evidence suggests that surface protrusion and tether extraction from neutrophils facilitate stable rolling by relieving the disruptive forces on adhesive bonds. Using a customized optical trap setup, we applied piconewton-level pulling forces on targeted receptors that were located either on the microvillus tip (CD162) or intermicrovillus surface of neutrophils (CD18 and CD44). Under a constant force-loading rate, there always occurred an initial tent-like surface protrusion that was terminated either by rupture of the adhesion or by a yield or crossover to tether extraction. The corresponding protrusional stiffness of neutrophils was found to be between 0.06 and 0.11 pN/nm, depending on the force-loading rate and the cytoskeletal integrity, but not on the force location, the medium osmolality, nor the temperature increase from 22 degrees C to 37 degrees C. More importantly, we found that neutrophil surface protrusion was accompanied by force relaxation and hysteresis. In addition, the crossover force did not change much in the range of force-loading rates studied, and the protrusional stiffness of lymphocytes was similar to that of neutrophils. These results show that neutrophil surface protrusion is essentially viscoelastic, with a protrusional stiffness that stems primarily from the actin cortex, and the crossover force is independent of the receptor-cytoskeleton interaction.

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