Documentation and localization of force-mediated filamin A domain perturbations in moving cells

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Abstract

Endogenously and externally generated mechanical forces influence diverse cellular activities, a phenomenon defined as mechanotransduction. Deformation of protein domains by application of stress, previously documented to alter macromolecular interactions in vitro, could mediate these effects. We engineered a photon-emitting system responsive to unfolding of two repeat domains of the actin filament (F-actin) crosslinker protein filamin A (FLNA) that binds multiple partners involved in cell signalling reactions and validated the system using F-actin networks subjected to myosin-based contraction. Expressed in cultured cells, the sensor-containing FLNA construct reproducibly reported FLNA domain unfolding strikingly localized to dynamic, actively protruding, leading cell edges. The unfolding signal depends upon coherence of F-actin-FLNA networks and is enhanced by stimulating cell contractility. The results establish protein domain distortion as a bona fide mechanism for mechanotransduction in vivo. © 2014 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Nakamura, F., Song, M., Hartwig, J. H., & Stossel, T. P. (2014). Documentation and localization of force-mediated filamin A domain perturbations in moving cells. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms5656

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