Laboratoire Matière et Systèmes Complexes (MSC), CNRS UMR 7057 & Université Paris Diderot, Paris, France.
Rep Prog Phys. 2012 Nov;75(11):116601. doi: 10.1088/0034-4885/75/11/116601. Epub 2012 Oct 19.
The minimal structural unit that defines living organisms is a single cell. By proliferating and mechanically interacting with each other, cells can build complex organization such as tissues that ultimately organize into even more complex multicellular living organisms, such as mammals, composed of billions of single cells interacting with each other. As opposed to passive materials, living cells actively respond to the mechanical perturbations occurring in their environment. Tissue cell adhesion to its surrounding extracellular matrix or to neighbors is an example of a biological process that adapts to physical cues. The adhesion of tissue cells to their surrounding medium induces the generation of intracellular contraction forces whose amplitude adapts to the mechanical properties of the environment. In turn, solicitation of adhering cells with physical forces, such as blood flow shearing the layer of endothelial cells in the lumen of arteries, reinforces cell adhesion and impacts cell contractility. In biological terms, the sensing of physical signals is transduced into biochemical signaling events that guide cellular responses such as cell differentiation, cell growth and cell death. Regarding the biological and developmental consequences of cell adaptation to mechanical perturbations, understanding mechanotransduction in tissue cell adhesion appears as an important step in numerous fields of biology, such as cancer, regenerative medicine or tissue bioengineering for instance. Physicists were first tempted to view cell adhesion as the wetting transition of a soft bag having a complex, adhesive interaction with the surface. But surprising responses of tissue cell adhesion to mechanical cues challenged this view. This, however, did not exclude that cell adhesion could be understood in physical terms. It meant that new models and descriptions had to be created specifically for these biological issues, and could not straightforwardly be adapted from dead matter. In this review, we present physical concepts of tissue cell adhesion and the unexpected cellular responses to mechanical cues such as external forces and stiffness sensing. We show how biophysical approaches, both experimentally and theoretically, have contributed to our understanding of the regulation of cellular functions through physical force sensing mechanisms. Finally, we discuss the different physical models that could explain how tissue cell adhesion and force sensing can be coupled to internal mechanosensitive processes within the cell body.
定义生物体的最小结构单元是单个细胞。通过增殖和机械相互作用,细胞可以构建复杂的组织,如组织,最终组织成更复杂的多细胞生物体,如哺乳动物,由数十亿个相互作用的单个细胞组成。与被动材料相反,活细胞积极响应其环境中发生的机械扰动。组织细胞与其周围细胞外基质或相邻细胞的粘附就是适应物理线索的生物过程的一个例子。组织细胞与其周围介质的粘附会诱导细胞内收缩力的产生,其幅度适应环境的力学特性。反过来,用物理力刺激粘附细胞,如血流剪切动脉管腔内皮细胞层,会增强细胞粘附并影响细胞收缩性。从生物学角度来看,物理信号的感知被转导成生化信号事件,指导细胞反应,如细胞分化、细胞生长和细胞死亡。关于细胞适应机械扰动的生物学和发育后果,理解组织细胞粘附的力传递似乎是生物学许多领域的重要步骤,如癌症、再生医学或组织生物工程等。物理学家最初倾向于将细胞粘附视为具有复杂粘附相互作用的软袋的润湿转变与表面。但是,组织细胞粘附对机械线索的惊人反应挑战了这一观点。这并不排除细胞粘附可以用物理术语来理解。这意味着必须为这些生物学问题创建新的模型和描述,而不能直接从无生命物质中改编。在这篇综述中,我们介绍了组织细胞粘附的物理概念以及对机械线索(如外力和刚度感知)的意外细胞反应。我们展示了生物物理方法,无论是实验上还是理论上,都有助于我们理解通过物理力感测机制调节细胞功能。最后,我们讨论了不同的物理模型,这些模型可以解释组织细胞粘附和力感测如何与细胞内的机械敏感过程耦合。