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Force-induced recruitment of cten along keratin network in epithelial cells.


ABSTRACT: The cytoskeleton provides structural integrity to cells and serves as a key component in mechanotransduction. Tensins are thought to provide a force-bearing linkage between integrins and the actin cytoskeleton; yet, direct evidence of tensin's role in mechanotransduction is lacking. We here report that local force application to epithelial cells using a micrometer-sized needle leads to rapid accumulation of cten (tensin 4), but not tensin 1, along a fibrous intracellular network. Surprisingly, cten-positive fibers are not actin fibers; instead, these fibers are keratin intermediate filaments. The dissociation of cten from tension-free keratin fibers depends on the duration of cell stretch, demonstrating that the external force favors maturation of cten-keratin network interactions over time and that keratin fibers retain remarkable structural memory of a cell's force-bearing state. These results establish the keratin network as an integral part of force-sensing elements recruiting distinct proteins like cten and suggest the existence of a mechanotransduction pathway via keratin network.

SUBMITTER: Cheah JS 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6778260 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Force-induced recruitment of cten along keratin network in epithelial cells.

Cheah Joleen S JS   Jacobs Kyle A KA   Heinrich Volkmar V   Lo Su Hao SH   Yamada Soichiro S  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20190916 40


The cytoskeleton provides structural integrity to cells and serves as a key component in mechanotransduction. Tensins are thought to provide a force-bearing linkage between integrins and the actin cytoskeleton; yet, direct evidence of tensin's role in mechanotransduction is lacking. We here report that local force application to epithelial cells using a micrometer-sized needle leads to rapid accumulation of cten (tensin 4), but not tensin 1, along a fibrous intracellular network. Surprisingly, c  ...[more]

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