Nanopillar force measurements reveal actin-cap-mediated YAP mechanotransduction
Metadata only
Date
2018-03Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
A robust nanopillar platform with increased spatial resolution reveals that perinuclear forces, originating from stress fibres spanning the nucleus of fibroblasts, are significantly higher on these nanostructured substrates than the forces acting on peripheral adhesions. Many perinuclear adhesions embrace several nanopillars at once, pulling them into β1-integrin- and zyxin-rich clusters, which are able to translocate in the direction of cell motion without losing their tensile strength. The high perinuclear forces are greatly reduced upon inhibition of cell contractility or actin polymerization and disruption of the actin cap by KASH dominant-negative mutant expression. LMNA null fibroblasts have higher peripheral versus perinuclear forces, impaired perinuclear β1-integrin recruitment, as well as YAP nuclear translocation, functional alterations that can be rescued by lamin A expression. These highly tensed actin-cap fibres are required for YAP nuclear signalling and thus play far more important roles in sensing nanotopographies and mechanochemical signal conversion than previously thought. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature Cell BiologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
NatureSubject
Actin; Mechanotransduction; Nuclear envelope; Stress fibresOrganisational unit
03640 - Vogel, Viola / Vogel, Viola
Funding
133122 - Towards simulating a cell adhesion site at angstrom resolution (SNF)
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