File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

  • Find it @ UNIST can give you direct access to the published full text of this article. (UNISTARs only)
Related Researcher

AmblardFrancois

Amblard, Francois
Read More

Views & Downloads

Detailed Information

Cited time in webofscience Cited time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

Mechanosensitive Adaptation of E-Cadherin Turnover across adherens Junctions

Author(s)
de Beco, SimonPerney, Jean-BaptisteCoscoy, SylvieAmblard, Francois
Issued Date
2015-06
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0128281
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/31031
Fulltext
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0128281
Citation
PLOS ONE, v.10, no.6, pp.e0128281
Abstract
In the natural and technological world, multi-agent systems strongly depend on how the interactions are ruled between their individual components, and the proper control of timescales and synchronization is a key issue. This certainly applies to living tissues when multicellular assemblies such as epithelial cells achieve complex morphogenetic processes. In epithelia, because cells are known to individually generate actomyosin contractile stress, each individual intercellular adhesive junction line is subjected to the opposed stresses independently generated by its two partner cells. Contact lines should thus move unless their two partner cells mechanically match. The geometric homeostasis of mature epithelia observed at short enough time-scale thus raises the problem to understand how cells, if considered as noisy individual actuators, do adapt across individual intercellular contacts to locally balance their time-average contractile stress. Structural components of adherens junctions, cytoskeleton (F-actin) and homophilic bonds (E-cadherin) are quickly renewed at steady-state. These turnovers, if they depend on forces exerted at contacts, may play a key role in the mechanical adaptation of epithelia. Here we focus on E-cadherin as a force transducer, and we study the local regulation and the mechanosensitivity of its turnover in junctions. We show that E-cadherin turnover rates match remarkably well on either side of mature intercellular contacts, despite the fact that they exhibit large fluctuations in time and variations from one junction to another. Using local mechanical and biochemical perturbations, we find faster turnover rates with increased tension, and asymmetric rates at unbalanced junctions. Together, the observations that E-cadherin turnover, and its local symmetry or asymmetry at each side of the junction, are mechanosensitive, support the hypothesis that E-cadherin turnover could be involved in mechanical homeostasis of epithelia.
Publisher
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
ISSN
1932-6203
Keyword
COLLECTIVE CELL-MIGRATIONALPHA-CATENINACTIN CYTOSKELETON2-PHOTON FRAPF-ACTINVINCULINTENSIONADHESIONBINDINGMECHANOTRANSDUCTION

qrcode

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.