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Physical Plasma Membrane Perturbation Using Subcellular Optogenetics Drives Integrin-Activated Cell Migration.

ACS synthetic biology (2019-02-16)
Xenia Meshik, Patrick R O'Neill, N Gautam
RESUMEN

Cells experience physical deformations to the plasma membrane that can modulate cell behaviors like migration. Understanding the molecular basis for how physical cues affect dynamic cellular responses requires new approaches that can physically perturb the plasma membrane with rapid, reversible, subcellular control. Here we present an optogenetic approach based on light-inducible dimerization that alters plasma membrane properties by recruiting cytosolic proteins at high concentrations to a target site. Surprisingly, this polarized accumulation of proteins in a cell induces directional amoeboid migration in the opposite direction. Consistent with known effects of constraining high concentrations of proteins to a membrane in vitro, there is localized curvature and tension decrease in the plasma membrane. Integrin activity, sensitive to mechanical forces, is activated in this region. Localized mechanical activation of integrin with optogenetics allowed simultaneous imaging of the molecular and cellular response, helping uncover a positive feedback loop comprising SFK- and ERK-dependent RhoA activation, actomyosin contractility, rearward membrane flow, and membrane tension decrease underlying this mode of cell migration.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Integrin β1 Antibody, activated, clone HUTS-4, Alexa Fluor 488 Conjugate, clone HUTS-4, from mouse, ALEXA FLUOR 488
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Integrin β1 Antibody, clone P4C10, culture supernatant, clone P4C10, Chemicon®