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Cell shape and tension alter focal adhesion structure.
Grandy, Carolin; Port, Fabian; Pfeil, Jonas; Oliva, Mariana Azevedo Gonzalez; Vassalli, Massimo; Gottschalk, Kay-Eberhard.
Affiliation
  • Grandy C; University Ulm, Institute of Experimental Physics, Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, 89081, Germany.
  • Port F; University Ulm, Institute of Experimental Physics, Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, 89081, Germany.
  • Pfeil J; University Ulm, Institute of Experimental Physics, Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, 89081, Germany.
  • Oliva MAG; University of Glasgow, James Watt School of Engineering, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom.
  • Vassalli M; University of Glasgow, James Watt School of Engineering, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom.
  • Gottschalk KE; University Ulm, Institute of Experimental Physics, Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, 89081, Germany. Electronic address: kay.gottschalk@uni-ulm.de.
Biomater Adv ; 145: 213277, 2023 Feb.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36621197
ABSTRACT
Cells are not only anchored to the extracellular matrix via the focal adhesion complex, the focal adhesion complex also serves as a sensor for force transduction. How tension influences the structure of focal adhesions is not well understood. Here, we analyse the effect of tension on the location of key focal adhesion proteins, namely vinculin, paxillin and actin. We use micropatterning on gold surfaces to manipulate the cell shape, to create focal adhesions at specific cell areas, and to perform metal-induced energy transfer (MIET) measurements on the patterned cells. MIET resolves the different protein locations with respect to the gold surface with nanometer accuracy. Further, we use drugs influencing the cellular motor protein myosin or mechanosensitive ion channels to get deeper insight into focal adhesions at different tension states. We show here that in particular actin is affected by the rationally tuned force balance. Blocking mechanosensitive ion channels has a particularly high influence on the actin and focal adhesion architecture, resulting in larger focal adhesions with elevated paxillin and vinculin and strongly lowered actin stress fibres. Our results can be explained by a balance of adhesion tension with cellular tension together with ion channel-controlled focal adhesion homeostasis, where high cellular tension leads to an elevation of vinculin and actin, while high adhesion tension lowers these proteins.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Actins / Focal Adhesions Language: En Year: 2023 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Actins / Focal Adhesions Language: En Year: 2023 Type: Article