首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Mechanical coupling of supracellular stress amplification and tissue fluidization during exit from quiescence
Authors:Emma Lå  ng,Christian Pedersen,Anna Lå  ng,Pernille Blicher,Arne Klungland,Andreas Carlson,Stig Ove Bø  e
Affiliation:aDepartment of Microbiology, Oslo University Hospital, 0373 Oslo, Norway;bDepartment of Mathematics, Mechanics Division, University of Oslo, 0851 Oslo, Norway;cDepartment of Medical Biochemistry, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, 0372 Oslo, Norway;dDepartment of Biosciences, University of Oslo, 0371 Oslo, Norway
Abstract:
Cellular quiescence is a state of reversible cell cycle arrest that is associated with tissue dormancy. Timely regulated entry into and exit from quiescence is important for processes such as tissue homeostasis, tissue repair, stem cell maintenance, developmental processes, and immunity. However, little is known about processes that control the mechanical adaption to cell behavior changes during the transition from quiescence to proliferation. Here, we show that quiescent human keratinocyte monolayers sustain an actinomyosin-based system that facilitates global cell sheet displacements upon serum-stimulated exit from quiescence. Mechanistically, exposure of quiescent cells to serum-borne mitogens leads to rapid amplification of preexisting contractile sites, leading to a burst in monolayer tension that subsequently drives large-scale displacements of otherwise motility-restricted monolayers. The stress level after quiescence exit correlates with the level of quiescence depth at the time of activation, and a critical stress magnitude must be reached to overcome the cell sheet displacement barrier. The study shows that static quiescent cell monolayers are mechanically poised for motility, and it identifies global stress amplification as a mechanism for overcoming motility restrictions in confined confluent cell monolayers.

Quiescence refers to a state of cell cycle arrest in which cells are retained in a standby mode, ready to re-enter the cell cycle upon activation by a given physiological stimuli. The pool of quiescent cells in the human body is typically represented by tissue-specific stem and progenitor cells, naive immune cells, fibroblasts, and epithelial cells (1, 2). In addition, certain cancer cells have the ability to evade cancer therapy by entering a dormant quiescence-like state (1, 2). Accordingly, careful regulation of entry into and exit out of quiescence is important for several physiological processes such as tissue homeostasis and repair, stem cell maintenance, immunity, reproduction, and development (1, 2).During homeostasis, the balance between quiescent and proliferating cells is controlled by constituents of the microenvironment such as soluble factors, extracellular matrix components, blood vessels, and neighboring cells. On the other hand, during episodes that require extensive tissue renewal and remodeling, for example after injury, coordinated stimulation of quiescent cells into proliferation is facilitated by increased exposure to blood-borne and cell-secreted mitogens through local inflammatory responses such as increased blood flow, increased vascular permeability (vasodilation), and immune cell recruitment (3, 4). Accordingly, a commonly used methodology for studies of quiescence in cultured mammalian cells involves consecutive treatments with serum-free and serum-containing growth medium (1).Quiescent cells are required to maintain a high level of preparedness in order to facilitate rapid activation of specialized cell functions once cell division is stimulated. In agreement with this, quiescent stem cells and naive immune cells have been shown to possess multiple epigenetic and posttranslation mechanisms that facilitate the rapid expression of linage-specific genes following stimulation of quiescence exit (2, 514). However, little is known about mechanical forces that facilitate adaptation to cell cycle–activated behaviors.Quiescence exit is frequently associated with activation of cell motility. For example, quiescent stem and naive immune cells migrate out of their niches in response to cell cycle activation in order to support tissue homeostasis, repopulate injured tissue, or to perform immune surveillance at distal locations (1518). In addition, reawakening of dormant quiescent cancer cells can cause tumor relapse and formation of metastases years after remission (19). In multilayered epithelial tissue, like the skin, exit from quiescence during homeostasis is associated with lateral migration to suprabasal regions, while skin injury evokes massive reawakening of basally localized keratinocytes concomitant with activation of cell sheet displacement by collective migration to restore damaged epidermal surfaces (2023). The strong correlation between quiescence exit and cell migration in multiple physiological settings suggests the existence of mechanisms that link quiescence exit to activation of cell motility.The dynamics of epithelial collectives is largely regulated by mechanical forces generated through cell–cell interactions as well as interactions between cells and the extracellular environment (24). Key components involved in controlling these forces are cytoskeletal components such as actinomyosin and adhesion complexes such as adherent junctions and focal adhesion complexes (25). Additional factors that have been reported to influence the dynamic behavior of epithelial monolayers include the presence of epithelial edges (24, 26), mechanical stretching or compression (27, 28), expression of the endosomal Rab5 protein (29), exposure of cells to growth factors (3032), local changes in cell shape (33), and the ability of cells to undergo neighbor exchange (34, 35). In addition, recent studies have also identified a functional link between cell cycle progression and force fluctuation leading to dynamic behavior of cultured epithelial monolayers (36, 37).In this study, we have investigated a mechanical link between quiescence exit and activation of large-scale cell sheet displacements. Using traction force microscopy (TFM), we found that confluent cell monolayers install an actinomyosin-based system during quiescence that produces a coordinated burst of contractile forces and intercellular tension across the epithelial monolayer immediately following exposure to serum-borne mitogens. By combining experiments and theoretical modeling, we show that the amplified forces are essential for driving coordinated cell sheet displacements within otherwise motility-restricted cell monolayers. Furthermore, the magnitude of mechanical forces created during quiescence exit and the extent of cell sheet displacement correlate with quiescence depth. Our study provides evidence that quiescent keratinocyte monolayers possess mechanical preparedness for motility and establish monolayer stress amplification as a strategy for overcoming the motility barrier in confined cell sheets.
Keywords:quiescence   mechanical forces   collective migration   keratinocytes   epithelial monolayer
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号