4.8 Article

A mechanical-biochemical feedback loop regulates remodeling in the actin cytoskeleton

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1417686111

关键词

mechanotransduction; mechanotransmission; contractility; stress fibers; cytoskeleton

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [GM086731, GM50877]
  2. Huntsman Cancer Foundation and shared resources from Cancer Center [2 P30 CA042014-21]
  3. NIH Multidisciplinary Cancer Research Training Grant [T32CA093247]
  4. NIH American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Grant [R01GM50877-15S1]
  5. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [T32CA093247, P30CA042014] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  6. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [R01GM086731, R01GM050877] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Cytoskeletal actin assemblies transmit mechanical stresses that molecular sensors transduce into biochemical signals to trigger cytoskeletal remodeling and other downstream events. How mechanical and biochemical signaling cooperate to orchestrate complex remodeling tasks has not been elucidated. Here, we studied remodeling of contractile actomyosin stress fibers. When fibers spontaneously fractured, they recoiled and disassembled actin synchronously. The disassembly rate was accelerated more than twofold above the resting value, but only when contraction increased the actin density to a threshold value following a time delay. A mathematical model explained this as originating in the increased overlap of actin filaments produced by myosin II-driven contraction. Above a threshold overlap, this mechanical signal is transduced into accelerated disassembly by a mechanism that may sense overlap directly or through associated elastic stresses. This biochemical response lowers the actin density, overlap, and stresses. The model showed that this feedback mechanism, together with rapid stress transmission along the actin bundle, spatiotemporally synchronizes actin disassembly and fiber contraction. Similar actin remodeling kinetics occurred in expanding or contracting intact stress fibers but over much longer timescales. The model accurately described these kinetics, with an almost identical value of the threshold overlap that accelerates disassembly. Finally, we measured resting stress fibers, for which the model predicts constant actin overlap that balances disassembly and assembly. The overlap was indeed regulated, with a value close to that predicted. Our results suggest that coordinated mechanical and biochemical signaling enables extended actomyosin assemblies to adapt dynamically to the mechanical stresses they convey and direct their own remodeling.

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