Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2289/6994
Title: Cytoskeletal Mechanisms of Axonal Contractility
Authors: Mutalik, Sampada P
Joseph, Joby
Pullarkat, Pramod A.
Ghose, Aurnab
Issue Date: 21-Aug-2018
Publisher: Biophysical Society
Citation: Biophysical Journal, 2018, Vol.115, p 713-724
Abstract: Mechanotransduction is likely to be an important mechanism of signaling in thin, elongated cells such as neurons. Maintenance of prestress or rest tension may facilitate mechanotransduction in these cells. In recent years, functional roles for mechanical tension in neuronal development and physiology are beginning to emerge, but the cellular mechanisms regulating neurite tension remain poorly understood. Active contraction of neurites is a potential mechanism of tension regulation. In this study, we have explored cytoskeletal mechanisms mediating active contractility of neuronal axons. We have developed a simple assay in which we evaluate contraction of curved axons upon trypsin-mediated detachment. We show that curved axons undergo contraction and straighten upon deadhesion. Axonal straightening was found to be actively driven by actomyosin contractility, whereas microtubules may subserve a secondary role. We find that although axons show a monotonous decrease in length upon contraction, subcellularly, the cytoskeleton shows a heterogeneous contractile response. Further, using an assay for spontaneous development of tension without trypsin-induced deadhesion, we show that axons are intrinsically contractile. These experiments, using novel experimental approaches, implicate the axonal cytoskeleton in tension homeostasis. Our data suggest that although globally, the axon behaves as a mechanical continuum, locally, the cytoskeleton is remodeled heterogeneously.
Description: Restricted Access.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2289/6994
ISSN: 0006-3495
Alternative Location: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2018.07.007
Copyright: 2018 Biophysical Society
Appears in Collections:Research Papers (SCM)

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