Differential cellular contractility as a mechanism for stiffness sensing
2019
The ability of cells to sense and respond to the mechanical properties of
their environments is fundamental to a range of cellular behaviours, with substrate
stiffness increasingly being found to be a key signalling factor. Although active
contractility of the cytoskeleton is clearly necessary for stiffness sensing in cells,
the physical mechanisms connecting contractility with mechanosensing and molecular
conformational change are not well understood. Here we present a contractility-driven
mechanism for linking changes in substrate stiffness with internal conformational
changes. Cellular contractility is often assumed to imply an associated compressive
strain. We show, however, that where the contractility is non-uniform, localized areas
of internal stretch can be generated as stiffer substrates are encountered. This suggests
a physical mechanism for the stretch-activation of mechanotransductive molecules on
stiffer substrates. Importantly, the areas of internal stretch occur deep within the
cell and not near the cellular perimeter, which region is more traditionally associated
with stiffness sensing through e.g. focal adhesions. This supports recent experimental
results on whole-cell mechanically-driven mechanotransduction. Considering cellular
shape we show that aspect ratio acts as an additional control parameter, so that the
onset of positive strain moves to higher stiffness values in elliptical cells.
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