整合素
焦点粘着
细胞外基质
刚度(电磁)
生物物理学
离合器
长春新碱
细胞生物学
纤维连接蛋白
转导(生物物理学)
细胞骨架
机械转化
肌动蛋白细胞骨架
信号转导
化学
材料科学
生物
细胞
物理
生物化学
复合材料
热力学
作者
Alberto Elósegui-Artola,Roger Oria,Yunfeng Chen,Anita Joanna Kosmalska,Carlos Pérez‐González,Natália Castro,Cheng Zhu,Xavier Trepat,Pere Roca‐Cusachs
摘要
Cell function depends on tissue rigidity, which cells probe by applying and transmitting forces to their extracellular matrix, and then transducing them into biochemical signals. Here we show that in response to matrix rigidity and density, force transmission and transduction are explained by the mechanical properties of the actin–talin–integrin–fibronectin clutch. We demonstrate that force transmission is regulated by a dynamic clutch mechanism, which unveils its fundamental biphasic force/rigidity relationship on talin depletion. Force transduction is triggered by talin unfolding above a stiffness threshold. Below this threshold, integrins unbind and release force before talin can unfold. Above the threshold, talin unfolds and binds to vinculin, leading to adhesion growth and YAP nuclear translocation. Matrix density, myosin contractility, integrin ligation and talin mechanical stability differently and nonlinearly regulate both force transmission and the transduction threshold. In all cases, coupling of talin unfolding dynamics to a theoretical clutch model quantitatively predicts cell response. Integrins and talin are parts of a ‘molecular clutch’ that mechanically links the actin cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix. Elosegui-Artola et al. now reveal a tunable rigidity threshold, above which talin unfolds to mediate force transduction.
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