Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Actin cap associated focal adhesions and their distinct role in cellular mechanosensing

Reporter: Aviral Vatsa

A new study in Scientific Reports by Dong Hwee Kim et al has demonstrated the role of actin cap associated focal adhesions in mechanosensing. It surely shines some light on how the cells might be able to resolve the different levels of mechanical stresses they experience and adapt according to them. Here is the abstract from the study

The ability for cells to sense and adapt to different physical microenvironments plays a critical role in development, immune responses, and cancer metastasis. Here we identify a small subset of focal adhesions that terminate fibers in the actin cap, a highly ordered filamentous actin structure that is anchored to the top of the nucleus by the LINC complexes; these differ from conventional focal adhesions in morphology, subcellular organization, movements, turnover dynamics, and response to biochemical stimuli. Actin cap associated focal adhesions (ACAFAs) dominate cell mechanosensing over a wide range of matrix stiffness, an ACAFA-specific function regulated by actomyosin contractility in the actin cap, while conventional focal adhesions are restrictively involved in mechanosensing for extremely soft substrates. These results establish the perinuclear actin cap and associated ACAFAs as major mediators of cellular mechanosensing and a critical element of the physical pathway that transduce mechanical cues all the way to the nucleus.

Source: 

  • Dong-Hwee Kim,
  • Shyam B. Khatau,
  • Yunfeng Feng,
  • Sam Walcott,
  • Sean X. Sun, 
  • Gregory D. Longmore 
  • Denis Wirtz. 
  • Scientific Reports
     
    2,
     
    Article number:
     
    555
     
    doi:10.1038/srep00555 
    Received
     
    27 March 2012 
    Accepted
     
    18 July 2012 
    Published
     
    03 August 2012

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