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Focal Adhesion Displacement Magnitude is a Unifying Feature of Tensional Homeostasis

30 Pages Posted: 5 May 2020 Publication Status: Accepted

See all articles by Han Xu

Han Xu

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

Stephanie Donegan

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

Alicia J. Stark

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

Elizabeth P. Canović

Independent

Dimitrije Stamenović

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

Michael L. Smith

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

Jordan M. Dreher

Norfolk State Universtiy - Department of Chemistry

Abstract

Tensional homeostasis is widely recognized to exist at the length scales of organs and tissues, but the cellular length scale mechanism for tension regulation is not known. In this study, we explored whether tensional homeostasis emerges from the behavior of the individual focal adhesion (FA), which is the subcellular structure that transmits cell stress to the surrounding extracellular matrix. Past studies have suggested that cell contractility builds up until a certain displacement is achieved, and we thus hypothesized that tensional homeostasis may require a threshold level of substrate displacement. Micropattern traction microscopy was used to study a wide range of FA traction forces generated by bovine vascular smooth muscle cells and bovine aortic endothelial cells cultured on substrates of stiffness of 3.6, 6.7, 13.6, and 30 kPa. The most striking feature of FA dynamics observed here is that the substrate displacement resulting from FA traction forces is a unifying feature that determines FA tensional stability. Beyond approximately 1 μm of substrate displacement, FAs, regardless of cell type or substrate stiffness, exhibit a precipitous drop in temporal fluctuations of traction forces. These findings lead us to the conclusion that traction force dynamics collectively determine whether cells or cell ensembles develop tensional homeostasis, and this insight is necessary to fully understand how matrix stiffness impacts cellular behavior in healthy conditions and, more important, in pathological conditions such as cancer or vascular aging, where environmental stiffness is altered.

Keywords: traction force microscopy, stiffness mechanosensing, cytoskeletal tension, tensional homeostasis, focal adhesions

Suggested Citation

Xu, Han and Donegan, Stephanie and Stark, Alicia J. and Canović, Elizabeth P. and Stamenović, Dimitrije and Smith, Michael L. and Dreher, Jordan M., Focal Adhesion Displacement Magnitude is a Unifying Feature of Tensional Homeostasis. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3582162 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3582162

Han Xu

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

595 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
United States

Stephanie Donegan

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

595 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
United States

Alicia J. Stark

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

595 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
United States

Elizabeth P. Canović

Independent

United States

Dimitrije Stamenović

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering

595 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
United States

Michael L. Smith (Contact Author)

Boston University - Department of Biomedical Engineering ( email )

595 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
United States

Jordan M. Dreher

Norfolk State Universtiy - Department of Chemistry

700 Park Avenue
Norfolk, VA 23504
United States

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