Mechano-Chemical Feedbacks Regulate Actin Mesh Growth in Lamellipodial Protrusions

During cell motion on a substratum, eukaryotic cells project sheetlike lamellipodia which contain a dynamically remodeling three-dimensional actin mesh. A number of regulatory proteins and subtle mechano-chemical couplings determine the lamellipodial protrusion dynamics. To study these processes, we...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBiophysical journal Vol. 98; no. 8; pp. 1375 - 1384
Main Authors Hu, Longhua, Papoian, Garegin A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 21.04.2010
Biophysical Society
The Biophysical Society
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Summary:During cell motion on a substratum, eukaryotic cells project sheetlike lamellipodia which contain a dynamically remodeling three-dimensional actin mesh. A number of regulatory proteins and subtle mechano-chemical couplings determine the lamellipodial protrusion dynamics. To study these processes, we constructed a microscopic physico-chemical computational model, which incorporates a number of fundamental reaction and diffusion processes, treated in a fully stochastic manner. Our work sheds light on the way lamellipodial protrusion dynamics is affected by the concentrations of actin and actin-binding proteins. In particular, we found that protrusion speed saturates at very high actin concentrations, where filament nucleation does not keep up with protrusion. This results in sparse filamentous networks, and, consequently, high resistance forces on individual filaments. We also observed maxima in lamellipodial growth rates as a function of Arp2/3, a nucleating protein, and capping proteins. We provide detailed physical explanations behind these effects. In particular, our work supports the actin-funneling-hypothesis explanation of protrusion speed enhancement at low capping protein concentrations. Our computational results are in agreement with a number of related experiments. Overall, our work emphasizes that elongation and nucleation processes work highly cooperatively in determining the optimal protrusion speed for the actin mesh in lamellipodia.
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ISSN:0006-3495
1542-0086
DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2009.11.054