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1.
Dev Cell ; 49(6): 920-935.e5, 2019 06 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31105008

ABSTRACT

Whether cell forces or extracellular matrix (ECM) can impact genome integrity is largely unclear. Here, acute perturbations (∼1 h) to actomyosin stress or ECM elasticity cause rapid and reversible changes in lamin-A, DNA damage, and cell cycle. The findings are especially relevant to organs such as the heart because DNA damage permanently arrests cardiomyocyte proliferation shortly after birth and thereby eliminates regeneration after injury including heart attack. Embryonic hearts, cardiac-differentiated iPS cells (induced pluripotent stem cells), and various nonmuscle cell types all show that actomyosin-driven nuclear rupture causes cytoplasmic mis-localization of DNA repair factors and excess DNA damage. Binucleation and micronuclei increase as telomeres shorten, which all favor cell-cycle arrest. Deficiencies in lamin-A and repair factors exacerbate these effects, but lamin-A-associated defects are rescued by repair factor overexpression and also by contractility modulators in clinical trials. Contractile cells on stiff ECM normally exhibit low phosphorylation and slow degradation of lamin-A by matrix-metalloprotease-2 (MMP2), and inhibition of this lamin-A turnover and also actomyosin contractility are seen to minimize DNA damage. Lamin-A is thus stress stabilized to mechano-protect the genome.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle Checkpoints , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , DNA Damage , Heart/embryology , Lamin Type A/metabolism , Mechanotransduction, Cellular , Nuclear Lamina/metabolism , Animals , Cell Differentiation , Chick Embryo , Chickens , DNA Repair , Extracellular Matrix , Heart/physiology , Humans , Organogenesis , Phosphorylation
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(32): 8939-44, 2016 08 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27457951

ABSTRACT

In the beating heart, cardiac myocytes (CMs) contract in a coordinated fashion, generating contractile wave fronts that propagate through the heart with each beat. Coordinating this wave front requires fast and robust signaling mechanisms between CMs. The primary signaling mechanism has long been identified as electrical: gap junctions conduct ions between CMs, triggering membrane depolarization, intracellular calcium release, and actomyosin contraction. In contrast, we propose here that, in the early embryonic heart tube, the signaling mechanism coordinating beats is mechanical rather than electrical. We present a simple biophysical model in which CMs are mechanically excitable inclusions embedded within the extracellular matrix (ECM), modeled as an elastic-fluid biphasic material. Our model predicts strong stiffness dependence in both the heartbeat velocity and strain in isolated hearts, as well as the strain for a hydrogel-cultured CM, in quantitative agreement with recent experiments. We challenge our model with experiments disrupting electrical conduction by perfusing intact adult and embryonic hearts with a gap junction blocker, ß-glycyrrhetinic acid (BGA). We find this treatment causes rapid failure in adult hearts but not embryonic hearts-consistent with our hypothesis. Last, our model predicts a minimum matrix stiffness necessary to propagate a mechanically coordinated wave front. The predicted value is in accord with our stiffness measurements at the onset of beating, suggesting that mechanical signaling may initiate the very first heartbeats.


Subject(s)
Heart Rate , Heart/embryology , Animals , Chick Embryo , Gap Junctions/physiology , Models, Biological , Myocardial Contraction , Myocytes, Cardiac/physiology
3.
Science ; 341(6149): 1240104, 2013 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23990565

ABSTRACT

Tissues can be soft like fat, which bears little stress, or stiff like bone, which sustains high stress, but whether there is a systematic relationship between tissue mechanics and differentiation is unknown. Here, proteomics analyses revealed that levels of the nucleoskeletal protein lamin-A scaled with tissue elasticity, E, as did levels of collagens in the extracellular matrix that determine E. Stem cell differentiation into fat on soft matrix was enhanced by low lamin-A levels, whereas differentiation into bone on stiff matrix was enhanced by high lamin-A levels. Matrix stiffness directly influenced lamin-A protein levels, and, although lamin-A transcription was regulated by the vitamin A/retinoic acid (RA) pathway with broad roles in development, nuclear entry of RA receptors was modulated by lamin-A protein. Tissue stiffness and stress thus increase lamin-A levels, which stabilize the nucleus while also contributing to lineage determination.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Elasticity , Lamin Type A/metabolism , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/cytology , Osteogenesis , Stress, Mechanical , Adipogenesis , Animals , Collagen/analysis , Collagen/chemistry , Collagen/metabolism , Extracellular Matrix/chemistry , Extracellular Matrix/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Humans , Lamin Type A/chemistry , Lamin Type A/genetics , Mice , Models, Biological , Nuclear Lamina/metabolism , Osteogenesis/genetics , Protein Conformation , Proteome , Transcription, Genetic , Tretinoin/metabolism , Vitamin A/metabolism
4.
Eur J Cell Biol ; 90(2-3): 249-60, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20663583

ABSTRACT

Anchorage to matrix is mediated for many cells not only by integrin-based focal adhesions but also by a parallel assembly of integral and peripheral membrane proteins known as the Dystroglycan Complex. Deficiencies in either dystrophin (mdx mice) or γ-sarcoglycan (γSG(-/-) mice) components of the Dystroglycan Complex lead to upregulation of numerous focal adhesion proteins, and the phosphoprotein paxillin proves to be among the most prominent. In mdx muscle, paxillin-Y31 and Y118 are both hyper-phosphorylated as are key sites in focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and the stretch-stimulatable pro-survival MAPK pathway, whereas γSG(-/-) muscle exhibits more erratic hyper-phosphorylation. In cultured myotubes, cell tension generated by myosin-II appears required for localization of paxillin to adhesions while vinculin appears more stably integrated. Overexpression of wild-type (WT) paxillin has no obvious effect on focal adhesion density or the physical strength of adhesion, but WT and a Y118F mutant promote contractile sarcomere formation whereas a Y31F mutant shows no effect, implicating Y31 in striation. Self-peeling of cells as well as Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) probing of cells with or without myosin-II inhibition indicate an increase in cell tension within paxillin-overexpressing cells. However, prednisolone, a first-line glucocorticoid for muscular dystrophies, decreases cell tension without affecting paxillin at adhesions, suggesting a non-linear relationship between paxillin and cell tension. Hypertension that results from upregulation of integrin adhesions is thus a natural and treatable outcome of Dystroglycan Complex down-regulation.


Subject(s)
Dystroglycans/metabolism , Focal Adhesions/metabolism , Paxillin/metabolism , Animals , Dystroglycans/genetics , Humans , Mice , Muscle Cells/cytology , Muscle Cells/metabolism , Muscular Dystrophies/metabolism , Muscular Dystrophies/pathology , Paxillin/biosynthesis , Paxillin/genetics , Signal Transduction , Up-Regulation
5.
Cytoskeleton (Hoboken) ; 67(12): 796-807, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20886611

ABSTRACT

Force-bearing linkages between the cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix are clearly important to normal cell viability-as is evident in a disease such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) which arises in the absence of the linkage protein dystrophin. Therapeutic approaches to DMD include antisense-mediated skipping of exons to delete nonsense mutations while maintaining reading frame, but the structure and stability of the resulting proteins are generally unclear. Here we use mass spectrometry to detect most dystrophin exons, and we express and physically characterize dystrophin "nano"-constructs based on multiexon deletions that might find use in a large percentage of DMD patients. The primary structure challenge is addressed first with liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) which can detect tryptic peptides from 53 of dystrophin's 79 exons; equivalent information from immunodetection would require 53 different high-specificity antibodies. Folding predictions for the nano-constructs reveal novel helical bundle domains that arise out of exon-deleted "linkers," while secondary structure studies confirm high helicity and also melting temperatures well above physiological. Extensional forces with an atomic force microscope nonetheless unfold the constructs, and the ensemble of unfolding trajectories reveal the number of folded domains, proving consistent with structure predictions. A mechanical cooperativity parameter for unfolding of tandem domains is also introduced as the best predictor of a multiexon deletion that is asymptomatic in humans. The results thereby provide insight and confidence in exon-skipped designs.


Subject(s)
Dystrophin/genetics , Exons , Genetic Therapy/methods , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/genetics , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/therapy , Cell Survival/genetics , Chromatography, Liquid , Chromosome Mapping , Circular Dichroism , Gene Duplication , Humans , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Protein Structure, Tertiary
6.
J Control Release ; 134(2): 132-40, 2009 Mar 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19084037

ABSTRACT

siRNA and antisense oligonucleotides, AON, have similar size and negative charge and are often packaged for in vitro delivery with cationic lipids or polymers-but exposed positive charge is problematic in vivo. Here we demonstrate loading and functional delivery of RNAi and AON with non-ionic, nano-transforming polymersomes. These degradable carriers are taken up passively by cultured cells after which the vesicles transform into micelles that allow endolysosomal escape and delivery of either siRNA into cytosol for mRNA knockdown or else AON into the nucleus for exon skipping within pre-mRNA. Polymersome-mediated knockdown appears as efficient as common cationic-lipid transfection and about half as effective as Lenti-virus after sustained selection. For AON, initial results also show that intramuscular injection into a mouse model of muscular dystrophy leads to the expected protein expression, which occurs along the entire length of muscle. The lack of cationic groups in antisense polymersomes together with initial tests of efficacy suggests broader utility of these non-viral carriers.


Subject(s)
Nanocapsules/administration & dosage , Nanocapsules/chemistry , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/administration & dosage , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/genetics , RNA, Small Interfering/administration & dosage , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , Animals , Biocompatible Materials/administration & dosage , Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Cell Line , Cell Nucleus/chemistry , Delayed-Action Preparations/administration & dosage , Delayed-Action Preparations/chemistry , Dystrophin/genetics , Dystrophin/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation , Lamins/genetics , Lamins/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred mdx , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/cytology , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/analysis , Oligonucleotides, Antisense/metabolism , RNA, Small Interfering/metabolism
7.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 2(4): 249-55, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18654271

ABSTRACT

Interaction of spherical particles with cells and within animals has been studied extensively, but the effects of shape have received little attention. Here we use highly stable, polymer micelle assemblies known as filomicelles to compare the transport and trafficking of flexible filaments with spheres of similar chemistry. In rodents, filomicelles persisted in the circulation up to one week after intravenous injection. This is about ten times longer than their spherical counterparts and is more persistent than any known synthetic nanoparticle. Under fluid flow conditions, spheres and short filomicelles are taken up by cells more readily than longer filaments because the latter are extended by the flow. Preliminary results further demonstrate that filomicelles can effectively deliver the anticancer drug paclitaxel and shrink human-derived tumours in mice. Although these findings show that long-circulating vehicles need not be nanospheres, they also lend insight into possible shape effects of natural filamentous viruses.


Subject(s)
Drug Carriers/chemistry , Flow Injection Analysis/methods , Lung Neoplasms/drug therapy , Nanospheres/chemistry , Paclitaxel/administration & dosage , Animals , Antineoplastic Agents/administration & dosage , Cell Line, Tumor , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Mice , Nanospheres/ultrastructure , Particle Size
8.
J Cell Sci ; 118(Pt 7): 1405-16, 2005 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15769854

ABSTRACT

The functions of gamma-sarcoglycan (gammaSG) in normal myotubes are largely unknown, however gammaSG is known to assemble into a key membrane complex with dystroglycan and its deficiency is one known cause of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. Previous findings of apoptosis from gammaSG-deficient mice are extended here to cell culture where apoptosis is seen to increase more than tenfold in gammaSG-deficient myotubes compared with normal cells. The deficient myotubes also exhibit an increased contractile prestress that results in greater shortening and widening when the cells are either lightly detached or self-detached. However, micropipette-forced peeling of single myotubes revealed no significant difference in cell adhesion. Consistent with a more contractile phenotype, acto-myosin striations were more prominent in gammaSG-deficient myotubes than in normal cells. An initial phosphoscreen of more than 12 signaling proteins revealed a number of differences between normal and gammaSG(-/-) muscle, both before and after stretching. MAPK-pathway proteins displayed the largest changes in activation, although significant phosphorylation also appeared for other proteins linked to hypertension. We conclude that gammaSG normally moderates contractile prestress in skeletal muscle, and we propose a role for gammaSG in membrane-based signaling of the effects of prestress and sarcomerogenesis.


Subject(s)
Apoptosis/physiology , Cell Adhesion/physiology , Cell Movement/physiology , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Myoblasts, Skeletal/physiology , Sarcoglycans/physiology , Animals , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Models, Biological , Myoblasts, Skeletal/cytology , Myoblasts, Skeletal/metabolism , Sarcoglycans/deficiency , Sarcoglycans/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology
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