Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Biophys J. 2014 Jan 7;106(1):124-33. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2013.10.042.
Understanding mechanosensitivity (i.e., how cells sense the stiffness of their environment) is very important, yet there is a fundamental difficulty in understanding its mechanism: to measure an elastic modulus one requires two points of application of force-a measuring and a reference point. The cell in contact with substrate has only one (adhesion) point to work with, and thus a new method of measurement needs to be invented. The aim of this theoretical work is to develop a self-consistent physical model for mechanosensitivity, a process by which a cell detects the mechanical stiffness of its environment (e.g., a substrate it is attached to via adhesion points) and generates an appropriate chemical signaling to remodel itself in response to this environment. The model uses the molecular mechanosensing complex of latent TGF-β attached to the adhesion point as the biomarker. We show that the underlying Brownian motion in the substrate is the reference element in the measuring process. The model produces a closed expression for the rate of release of active TGF-β, which depends on the substrate stiffness and the pulling force coming from the cell in a subtle and nontrivial way. It is consistent with basic experimental data showing an increase in signal for stiffer substrates and higher pulling forces. In addition, we find that for each cell there is a range of stiffness where a homeostatic configuration of the cell can be achieved, outside of which the cell either relaxes its cytoskeletal forces and detaches from the very weak substrate, or generates an increasingly strong pulling force through stress fibers with a positive feedback loop on very stiff substrates. In this way, the theory offers the underlying mechanism for the myofibroblast conversion in wound healing and smooth muscle cell dysfunction in cardiac disease.
理解机械敏感性(即细胞如何感知其环境的刚性)非常重要,但理解其机制存在一个基本困难:要测量弹性模量,需要在两个点施加力——一个测量点和一个参考点。与基底接触的细胞只有一个(粘附)点可以使用,因此需要发明一种新的测量方法。这项理论工作的目的是开发一种机械敏感性的自洽物理模型,这是一个细胞检测其环境机械刚度的过程(例如,通过粘附点附着在其上的基底),并产生适当的化学信号来响应环境重塑自身。该模型使用附着在粘附点上的潜伏 TGF-β的分子机械传感复合物作为生物标志物。我们表明,基底中的潜在布朗运动是测量过程中的参考元素。该模型产生了活性 TGF-β释放率的封闭表达式,该表达式取决于基底的刚性和来自细胞的拉力,这是一种微妙而复杂的方式。它与基本实验数据一致,表明刚性较大的基底和较高的拉力信号增加。此外,我们发现对于每个细胞,都存在一个细胞可以达到稳态配置的刚度范围,超出该范围,细胞要么放松其细胞骨架力并从非常弱的基底上脱离,要么通过应力纤维产生越来越强的拉力,并在非常刚性的基底上产生正反馈回路。通过这种方式,该理论为伤口愈合中的成肌纤维细胞转化和心脏疾病中的平滑肌细胞功能障碍提供了潜在的机制。