Traction stress in focal adhesions correlates biphasically with actin retrograde flow speed
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 15 December 2008
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 183 (6) , 999-1005
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200810060
Abstract
How focal adhesions (FAs) convert retrograde filamentous actin (F-actin) flow into traction stress on the extracellular matrix to drive cell migration is unknown. Using combined traction force and fluorescent speckle microscopy, we observed a robust biphasic relationship between F-actin speed and traction force. F-actin speed is inversely related to traction stress near the cell edge where FAs are formed and F-actin motion is rapid. In contrast, larger FAs where the F-actin speed is low are marked by a direct relationship between F-actin speed and traction stress. We found that the biphasic switch is determined by a threshold F-actin speed of 8-10 nm/s, independent of changes in FA protein density, age, stress magnitude, assembly/disassembly status, or subcellular position induced by pleiotropic perturbations to Rho family guanosine triphosphatase signaling and myosin II activity. Thus, F-actin speed is a fundamental regulator of traction force at FAs during cell migration.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparative Dynamics of Retrograde Actin Flow and Focal Adhesions: Formation of Nascent Adhesions Triggers Transition from Fast to Slow FlowPLOS ONE, 2008
- Actin and α-actinin orchestrate the assembly and maturation of nascent adhesions in a myosin II motor-independent mannerNature Cell Biology, 2008
- Regulation of Actin Assembly Associated With Protrusion and Adhesion in Cell MigrationPhysiological Reviews, 2008
- High Resolution Traction Force Microscopy Based on Experimental and Computational AdvancesBiophysical Journal, 2008
- Functional atlas of the integrin adhesomeNature Cell Biology, 2007
- The Universal Dynamics of Cell SpreadingCurrent Biology, 2007
- Slipping or Gripping? Fluorescent Speckle Microscopy in Fish Keratocytes Reveals Two Different Mechanisms for Generating a Retrograde Flow of ActinMolecular Biology of the Cell, 2005
- FAK–Src signalling through paxillin, ERK and MLCK regulates adhesion disassemblyNature Cell Biology, 2004
- Methods of Digital Video Microscopy for Colloidal StudiesJournal of Colloid and Interface Science, 1996
- Growth cone advance is inversely proportional to retrograde F-actin flowNeuron, 1995