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  4. Role of focal adhesions and mechanical stresses in the formation and progression of the lamellum interface
 
research article

Role of focal adhesions and mechanical stresses in the formation and progression of the lamellum interface

Shemesh, T.
•
Verkhovsky, A. B.  
•
Svitkina, T. M.
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2009
Biophysical Journal

Actin network in the front part of a moving cell is organized into a lamellipodium and a lamellum. A distinct lamellipodium-lamellum interface is associated with focal adhesions and consists of a series of arclike segments linking neighboring focal adhesions in the front row. The interface advances by leaping onto new rows of focal adhesions maturating underneath the lamellipodium. We propose a mechanism of the lamellipodium-lamellum boundary generation, shape formation, and progression based on the elastic stresses generated in the lamellipodial actin gel by its friction against the focal adhesions. The crucial assumption of the model is that stretching stresses trigger actin gel disintegration. We compute the stress distribution throughout the actin gel and show that the gel-disintegrating stresses drive formation of a gel boundary passing through the row of focal adhesions. Our computations recover the lamellipodium-lamellum boundary shapes detected in cells and predict the mode of the boundary transition to the row of the newly maturing focal adhesions in agreement with the experimental observations. The model fully accounts for the current phenomenology of the lamellipodium-lamellum interface formation and advancing, and makes experimentally testable predictions on the dependence of these phenomena on the sizes of the focal adhesions, the character of the focal adhesion distribution on the substrate, and the velocity of the actin retrograde flow with respect to the focal adhesions. The phase diagram resulting from the model provides a background for quantitative classification of different cell types with respect to their ability to form a lamellipodium-lamellum interface. In addition, the model suggests a mechanism of nucleation of the dorsal and arclike actin bundles found in the lamellum. © 2009 by the Biophysical Society.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.bpj.2009.05.065
Web of Science ID

WOS:000269429400004

Author(s)
Shemesh, T.
Verkhovsky, A. B.  
Svitkina, T. M.
Bershadsky, A. D.
Kozlov, M. M.
Date Issued

2009

Published in
Biophysical Journal
Volume

97

Issue

5

Start page

1254

End page

1264

Subjects

Neuronal Growth Cone

•

Fluorescent Speckle Microscopy

•

Retrograde Actin Flow

•

Migrating Cells

•

Nascent Adhesions

•

Motility Driven

•

Dynamics

•

Adf/Cofilin

•

Filaments

•

Cofilin

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCB  
Available on Infoscience
March 25, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/48730
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