Cytoskeletal actin networks in motile cells are critically self-organized systems synchronized by mechanical interactions

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Abstract

Growing networks of actin fibers are able to organize into compact, stiff two-dimensional structures inside lamellipodia of crawling cells. We put forward the hypothesis that the growing actin network is a critically self-organized system, in which long-range mechanical stresses arising from the interaction with the plasma membrane provide the selective pressure leading to organization. We show that a simple model based only on this principle reproduces the stochastic nature of lamellipodia protrusion (growth periods alternating with fast retractions) and several of the features observed in experiments: a growth velocity initially insensitive to the external force; the capability of the network to organize its orientation; a load-history-dependent growth velocity. Our model predicts that the spectrum of the time series of the height of a growing lamellipodium decays with the inverse of the frequency. This behavior is a well-known signature of self-organized criticality and is confirmed by unique optical tweezer measurements performed in vivo on neuronal growth cones.

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Cardamone, L., Laio, A., Torre, V., Shahapure, R., & DeSimone, A. (2011). Cytoskeletal actin networks in motile cells are critically self-organized systems synchronized by mechanical interactions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108(34), 13978–13983. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1100549108

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