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1.
Nat Mater ; 20(8): 1156-1166, 2021 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33603188

RESUMO

Actomyosin machinery endows cells with contractility at a single-cell level. However, within a monolayer, cells can be contractile or extensile based on the direction of pushing or pulling forces exerted by their neighbours or on the substrate. It has been shown that a monolayer of fibroblasts behaves as a contractile system while epithelial or neural progentior monolayers behave as an extensile system. Through a combination of cell culture experiments and in silico modelling, we reveal the mechanism behind this switch in extensile to contractile as the weakening of intercellular contacts. This switch promotes the build-up of tension at the cell-substrate interface through an increase in actin stress fibres and traction forces. This is accompanied by mechanotransductive changes in vinculin and YAP activation. We further show that contractile and extensile differences in cell activity sort cells in mixtures, uncovering a generic mechanism for pattern formation during cell competition, and morphogenesis.


Assuntos
Actomiosina/metabolismo , Fenômenos Mecânicos , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Movimento Celular , Simulação por Computador , Modelos Biológicos
3.
Mol Biol Cell ; 29(4): 380-388, 2018 02 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29282282

RESUMO

The shaping of a multicellular body and repair of adult tissues require fine--tuning of cell adhesion, cell mechanics, and intercellular transmission of mechanical load. Adherens junctions (AJs) are the major intercellular junctions by which cells sense and exert mechanical force on each other. However, how AJs adapt to mechanical stress and how this adaptation contributes to cell-cell cohesion and eventually to tissue-scale dynamics and mechanics remains largely unknown. Here, by analyzing the tension-dependent recruitment of vinculin, α-catenin, and F-actin as a function of stiffness, as well as the dynamics of GFP-tagged wild-type and mutated α-catenins, altered for their binding capability to vinculin, we demonstrate that the force-dependent binding of vinculin stabilizes α-catenin and is responsible for AJ adaptation to force. Challenging cadherin complexes mechanical coupling with magnetic tweezers, and cell-cell cohesion during collective cell movements, further highlight that tension-dependent adaptation of AJs regulates cell-cell contact dynamics and coordinated collective cell migration. Altogether, these data demonstrate that the force-dependent α-catenin/vinculin interaction, manipulated here by mutagenesis and mechanical control, is a core regulator of AJ mechanics and long-range cell-cell interactions.


Assuntos
Actinas/metabolismo , Junções Aderentes/metabolismo , Vinculina/metabolismo , alfa Catenina/metabolismo , Animais , Adesão Celular , Células Cultivadas , Cães , Imunofluorescência , Humanos , Células Madin Darby de Rim Canino , Fenômenos Mecânicos , Mecanotransdução Celular , Ligação Proteica
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