APS March Meeting 2012
Volume 57, Number 1
Monday–Friday, February 27–March 2 2012;
Boston, Massachusetts
Session Z2: Invited Session: Active Responses of Biological Materials to Mechanical Stress
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Friday, March 2, 2012
Room: 204AB
Sponsoring
Units:
DCMP DBIO
Chair: Allen Ehrlicher, Harvard University and Chin-Lin Guo, California Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2012.MAR.Z2.3
Abstract: Z2.00003 : Environmental properties set cell mechanics and morphology
12:27 PM–1:03 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Paul Janmey
(University of Pennsylvania)
Many cell types are sensitive to mechanical signals that are produced either
by application of exogenous force to their surfaces, or by the resistance
that their surroundings place on forces generated by the cells themselves.
Cell morphology, motility, proliferation, and protein expression all change
in response to substrate stiffness. Changing the elastic moduli of
substrates alters the formation of focal adhesions, the assembly of actin
filaments into bundles, and the stability of intermediate filaments. The
range of stiffness over which different primary cell types respond can vary
over a wide range and generally reflects the elastic modulus of the tissue
from which these cells were isolated. Mechanosensing depends on the type of
adhesion receptor by which the cell binds, and therefore on both the
molecular composition of the extracellular matrix and the nature of its link
to the cytoskeleton. Many cell types can alter their own stiffness to match
that of the substrate to which they adhere. The maximal elastic modulus that
cells such as fibroblasts can attain is similar to that of crosslinked actin
networks at the concentrations in the cell cortex.
The precise mechanisms of mechanosensing are not well defined, but they
presumably require an elastic connection between cell and substrate,
mediated by transmembrane proteins. The viscoelastic properties of different
extracellular matrices and cytoskeletal elements strongly influence the
response of cells to mechanical signals, and the unusual non-linear
elasticity of many biopolymer gels, characterized by strain-stiffening,
leads to novel mechanisms by which cells alter their stiffness by engagement
of molecular motors that produce internal stresses. Cell cortical elasticity
is dominated by cytoskeletal polymer networks and can be modulated by
internal tension. Simultaneous control of substrate stiffness and adhesive
patterns suggests that stiffness sensing occurs on a length scale much
larger than single molecular linkages and that the time needed for
mechanosensing is on the order of a few seconds.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2012.MAR.Z2.3