Cellular microenvironments reveal defective mechanosensing responses and elevated YAP signaling in LMNA-mutated muscle precursors
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Journal of Cell Science. 2014-06-30, vol. 127, n° 13, p. 2873-2884
Company of Biologists
Résumé en anglais
The mechanisms underlying the cell response to mechanical forces are crucial for muscle development and functionality. We aim to determine whether mutations of the LMNA gene (which encodes lamin A/C) causing congenital ...Lire la suite >
The mechanisms underlying the cell response to mechanical forces are crucial for muscle development and functionality. We aim to determine whether mutations of the LMNA gene (which encodes lamin A/C) causing congenital muscular dystrophy impair the ability of muscle precursors to sense tissue stiffness and to respond to mechanical challenge. We found that LMNA-mutated myoblasts embedded in soft matrix did not align along the gel axis, whereas control myoblasts did. LMNA-mutated myoblasts were unable to tune their cytoskeletal tension to the tissue stiffness as attested by inappropriate cell-matrix adhesion sites and cytoskeletal tension in soft versus rigid substrates or after mechanical challenge. Importantly, in soft two-dimensional (2D) and/or static three-dimensional (3D) conditions, LMNA-mutated myoblasts showed enhanced activation of the yes-associated protein (YAP) signaling pathway that was paradoxically reduced after cyclic stretch. siRNA-mediated downregulation of YAP reduced adhesion and actin stress fibers in LMNA myoblasts. This is the first demonstration that human myoblasts with LMNA mutations have mechanosensing defects through a YAP-dependent pathway. In addition, our data emphasize the crucial role of biophysical attributes of cellular microenvironment to the response of mechanosensing pathways in LMNA-mutated myoblasts.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
Yes-associated protein
Muscular dystrophy
LMNA
Cell microenvironment
Mechanosensitivity
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche