Center for Engineering MechanoBiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Apr 12;119(15):e2116718119. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2116718119. Epub 2022 Apr 8.
Cells can sense and respond to mechanical forces in fibrous extracellular matrices (ECMs) over distances much greater than their size. This phenomenon, termed long-range force transmission, is enabled by the realignment (buckling) of collagen fibers along directions where the forces are tensile (compressive). However, whether other key structural components of the ECM, in particular glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), can affect the efficiency of cellular force transmission remains unclear. Here we developed a theoretical model of force transmission in collagen networks with interpenetrating GAGs, capturing the competition between tension-driven collagen fiber alignment and the swelling pressure induced by GAGs. Using this model, we show that the swelling pressure provided by GAGs increases the stiffness of the collagen network by stretching the fibers in an isotropic manner. We found that the GAG-induced swelling pressure can help collagen fibers resist buckling as the cells exert contractile forces. This mechanism impedes the alignment of collagen fibers and decreases long-range cellular mechanical communication. We experimentally validated the theoretical predictions by comparing the intensity of collagen fiber alignment between cellular spheroids cultured on collagen gels versus collagen–GAG cogels. We found significantly lower intensities of aligned collagen in collagen–GAG cogels, consistent with the prediction that GAGs can prevent collagen fiber alignment. The role of GAGs in modulating force transmission uncovered in this work can be extended to understand pathological processes such as the formation of fibrotic scars and cancer metastasis, where cells communicate in the presence of abnormally high concentrations of GAGs.
细胞可以远距离感知和响应纤维细胞外基质(ECM)中的机械力,其距离远大于细胞本身的大小。这种现象被称为长程力传递,它是通过胶原纤维在受拉力(压力)的方向上重新排列(弯曲)来实现的。然而,ECM 的其他关键结构成分,特别是糖胺聚糖(GAGs),是否能影响细胞力传递的效率尚不清楚。在这里,我们开发了一个具有互穿 GAG 的胶原网络中力传递的理论模型,该模型捕捉了张力驱动的胶原纤维排列和 GAG 诱导的膨胀压力之间的竞争。使用这个模型,我们表明 GAG 提供的膨胀压力通过以各向同性的方式拉伸纤维来增加胶原网络的刚度。我们发现,当细胞施加收缩力时,GAG 诱导的膨胀压力可以帮助胶原纤维抵抗弯曲,从而阻碍胶原纤维的排列并降低长程细胞力学通讯。我们通过比较细胞球体在胶原凝胶和胶原-GAG 共凝胶上培养时胶原纤维排列的强度,实验验证了理论预测。我们发现胶原-GAG 共凝胶中的胶原纤维排列强度明显降低,这与 GAG 可以防止胶原纤维排列的预测一致。这项工作中揭示的 GAG 在调节力传递中的作用可以扩展到理解病理性过程,例如纤维化疤痕的形成和癌症转移,在这些过程中,细胞在异常高浓度的 GAG 存在下进行通讯。