4.1 Article

Quantifying force transmission through fibroblasts: changes of traction forces under external shearing

期刊

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00249-021-01576-8

关键词

Cell adhesion; Mechanobiology; Traction force microscopy; Micromanipulation

资金

  1. ERC [336104, 768740]
  2. DFG [2082/1-390761711, 2082/1-399390761711]
  3. Carl Zeiss Foundation
  4. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
  5. Volkswagen Foundation Life? program [A130142]
  6. National Institutes of Health [U54 210184, R01 HL082792, R01 GM137605]
  7. European Research Council (ERC) [768740, 336104] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Researchers have developed a novel approach to quantify intracellular force transmission by combining microneedle shearing and traction force microscopy. The experiment shows that cells dynamically redistribute forces under external shearing and experience changes in force loading during sequential rupture of their adhesion sites. This strategy offers new perspectives for future studies of force transmission and mechanotransduction in cells.
Mammalian cells have evolved complex mechanical connections to their microenvironment, including focal adhesion clusters that physically connect the cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix. This mechanical link is also part of the cellular machinery to transduce, sense and respond to external forces. Although methods to measure cell attachment and cellular traction forces are well established, these are not capable of quantifying force transmission through the cell body to adhesion sites. We here present a novel approach to quantify intracellular force transmission by combining microneedle shearing at the apical cell surface with traction force microscopy at the basal cell surface. The change of traction forces exerted by fibroblasts to underlying polyacrylamide substrates as a response to a known shear force exerted with a calibrated microneedle reveals that cells redistribute forces dynamically under external shearing and during sequential rupture of their adhesion sites. Our quantitative results demonstrate a transition from dipolar to monopolar traction patterns, an inhomogeneous distribution of the external shear force to the adhesion sites as well as dynamical changes in force loading prior to and after the rupture of single adhesion sites. Our strategy of combining traction force microscopy with external force application opens new perspectives for future studies of force transmission and mechanotransduction in cells.

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