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Force amplification response of actin filaments under confined compression

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-13, 00:00 authored by Wren Greene, T Anderson, H Zeng, B Zappone, J Israelachvili
Actin protein is a major component of the cell cytoskeleton, and its ability to respond to external forces and generate propulsive forces through the polymerization of filaments is central to many cellular processes. The mechanisms governing actin's abilities are still not fully understood because of the difficulty in observing these processes at a molecular level. Here, we describe a technique for studying actin–surface interactions by using a surface forces apparatus that is able to directly visualize and quantify the collective forces generated when layers of noninterconnected, end-tethered actin filaments are confined between 2 (mica) surfaces. We also identify a force-response mechanism in which filaments not only stiffen under compression, which increases the bending modulus, but more importantly generates opposing forces that are larger than the compressive force. This elastic stiffening mechanism appears to require the presence of confining surfaces, enabling actin filaments to both sense and respond to compressive forces without additional mediating proteins, providing insight into the potential role compressive forces play in many actin and other motor protein-based phenomena.

History

Journal

National academy of sciences. Proceedings

Volume

106

Issue

2

Pagination

445 - 449

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Location

Washington, D. C.

ISSN

0027-8424

eISSN

1091-6490

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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