TY - JOUR
T1 - An Integrated Stochastic Model of Matrix-Stiffness-Dependent Filopodial Dynamics
AU - Cheng, Bo
AU - Lin, Min
AU - Li, Yuhui
AU - Huang, Guoyou
AU - Yang, Hui
AU - Genin, Guy M.
AU - Deshpande, Vikram S.
AU - Lu, Tian Jian
AU - Xu, Feng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Biophysical Society
PY - 2016/11/1
Y1 - 2016/11/1
N2 - The ways that living cells regulate their behavior in response to their local mechanical environment underlie growth, development, and healing and are important to critical pathologies such as metastasis and fibrosis. Although extensive experimental evidence supports the hypothesis that this regulation is governed by the dependence of filopodial dynamics upon extracellular matrix stiffness, the pathways for this dependence are unclear. We therefore developed a model to relate filopodial focal adhesion dynamics to integrin-mediated Rho signaling kinetics. Results showed that focal adhesion maturation, i.e., focal adhesion links reinforcement and integrin clustering, dominates over filopodial dynamics. Downregulated focal adhesion maturation leads to the biphasic relationship between extracellular matrix stiffness and retrograde flow that has been observed in embryonic chick forebrain neurons, whereas upregulated maturation leads to the monotonically decreasing relationship that has been observed in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. When integrin-mediated Rho activation and stress-dependent focal adhesion maturation are combined, the model shows how filopodial dynamics endows cells with exquisite mechanosensing. Taken together, the results support the hypothesis that mechanical and structural factors combine with signaling kinetics to enable cells to probe their environments via filopodial dynamics.
AB - The ways that living cells regulate their behavior in response to their local mechanical environment underlie growth, development, and healing and are important to critical pathologies such as metastasis and fibrosis. Although extensive experimental evidence supports the hypothesis that this regulation is governed by the dependence of filopodial dynamics upon extracellular matrix stiffness, the pathways for this dependence are unclear. We therefore developed a model to relate filopodial focal adhesion dynamics to integrin-mediated Rho signaling kinetics. Results showed that focal adhesion maturation, i.e., focal adhesion links reinforcement and integrin clustering, dominates over filopodial dynamics. Downregulated focal adhesion maturation leads to the biphasic relationship between extracellular matrix stiffness and retrograde flow that has been observed in embryonic chick forebrain neurons, whereas upregulated maturation leads to the monotonically decreasing relationship that has been observed in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. When integrin-mediated Rho activation and stress-dependent focal adhesion maturation are combined, the model shows how filopodial dynamics endows cells with exquisite mechanosensing. Taken together, the results support the hypothesis that mechanical and structural factors combine with signaling kinetics to enable cells to probe their environments via filopodial dynamics.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84995618041&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bpj.2016.09.026
DO - 10.1016/j.bpj.2016.09.026
M3 - 文章
C2 - 27806285
AN - SCOPUS:84995618041
SN - 0006-3495
VL - 111
SP - 2051
EP - 2061
JO - Biophysical Journal
JF - Biophysical Journal
IS - 9
ER -