cytoskeleton

1

Extracellular matrix, mechanotransduction and structural hierarchies in heart tissue engineering

http://www.childrenshospital.org
Year of publication: 
2007
Journal name: 
Philosophical Transaction of Royal Society B
The spatial and temporal scales of cardiac organogenesis and pathogenesis make engineering of artificial heart tissue a daunting challenge. The temporal scales range from nanosecond conformational changes responsible for ion channel opening to fibrillation which occurs over Read more »
3

Mechanotransduction in vascular physiology and atherogenesis

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80
Year of publication: 
2009
Journal name: 
Nat Rev Mol Cell Bio
Forces associated with blood flow are major determinants of vascular morphogenesis and physiology. Blood flow is crucial for blood vessel development during embryogenesis and for regulation of vessel diameter in adult life. It is also a key factor in atherosclerosis, which, despite the systemic nature of major risk factors, occurs mainly at regions of arteries that experience disturbances in fluid flow. Read more »
creber's picture
Created by creber 2 years 21 weeks ago – Made popular 2 years 21 weeks ago
Category: Endothelial and Smooth Muscle   Tags:
2

Finite-Element Analysis of the Adhesion-Cytoskeleton-Nucleus Mechanotransduction Pathway During Endothelial Cell Rounding: Axisymmetric Model

http://www.seas.upenn.edu
Year of publication: 
2005
Journal name: 
JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Endothelial cells possess a mechanical network connecting adhesions on the basal surface, the cytoskeleton, and the nucleus. Transmission of force at adhesions via this pathway can deform the nucleus, ultimately resulting in an alteration of gene expression and other cellular changes (mechanotransduction). Previously, we measured cell adhesion area and apparent nuclear stretch during endothelial cell rounding. Here, we reconstruct the stress map of the nucleus from the observed strains using finite-element modeling. To Read more »
liyi-xu's picture
Created by liyi-xu 2 years 21 weeks ago – Made popular 2 years 21 weeks ago
Category: Adherens Junctions   Tags:
5

Integrins in Mechanotransduction

http://www.jbc.org
Year of publication: 
2004
Journal name: 
The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Mechanical forces are crucial to the regulation of cell and tissue morphology and function. At the cellular level, forces influence cytoskeletal organization, gene expression, proliferation, and survival. Integrin-mediated adhesions are intrinsically mechanosensitive and a large body of data implicates integrins in sensing mechanical forces. We review the relationship between integrins and mechanical forces, the role of integrins in cellular responses to stretch and fluid flow, and propose that some of these events are mechanistically related. Read more »
1

Nonequilibrium Mechanics of Active Cytoskeletal Networks

http://www.sciencemag.org
Year of publication: 
2007
Journal name: 
Science
Cells both actively generate and sensitively react to forces through their mechanical framework, the cytoskeleton, which is a nonequilibrium composite material including polymers and motor proteins. We measured the dynamics and mechanical properties of a simple three-component model system consisting of myosin II, actin filaments, and cross-linkers. Read more »
csi's picture
Created by csi 2 years 21 weeks ago
Category: Cytoskeletal Dynamics   Tags:
0

Mechanotransduction: All Signals Point to Cytoskeleton, Matrix, and Integrins

http://stke.sciencemag.org
Year of publication: 
2002
Journal name: 
Science STKE
Mechanical stresses modulate cell function by either activating or tuning signal transduction pathways. Mechanotransduction, the process by which cells convert mechanical stimuli into a chemical response, occurs both in cells specialized for sensing mechanical cues and in parenchymal cells whose primary function is not mechanosensory. However, common among the various responses to mechanical stress is the importance of direct or indirect connections between the internal cytoskeleton, the extracellular matrix (ECM), and traditional signal transducing molecules. Read more »
jkliu's picture
Created by jkliu 2 years 21 weeks ago
Category: Cell Mechanotransduction   Tags:
1

Tensegrity: The architectural basis of cellular mechanotransduction

http://arjournals.annualreviews.org
Year of publication: 
1997
Journal name: 
Annual Review of Physiology
Physical forces of gravity, hemodynamic stresses, and movement play a critical role in tissue development. Yet, little is known about how cells convert these mechanical signals into a chemical response. This review attempts to place the potential molecular mediators of mechanotransduction (e.g. stretch-sensitive ion channels, signaling molecules, cytoskeleton, integrins) within the context of the structural complexity of living cells. The model presented relies on recent experimental findings, which suggests that cells use tensegrity architecture for their organization. Read more »
0

Cell mechanics and mechanotransduction: pathways, probes, and physiology

http://www.materials.uoc.gr
Year of publication: 
2004
Journal name: 
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol
Cells face not only a complex biochemical environment but also a diverse biomechanical environment. How cells respond to variations in mechanical forces is critical in homeostasis and many diseases. The mechanisms by which mechanical forces lead to eventual biochemical and molecular responses remain undefined, and unraveling this mystery will undoubtedly provide new insight into strengthening bone, growing cartilage, improving cardiac contractility, and constructing tissues for artificial organs. In this article we review the physical bases underlying the mechanotransduction process, Read more »
huangfang8899's picture
Created by huangfang8899 2 years 21 weeks ago – Made popular 2 years 21 weeks ago
Category: Cell Mechanotransduction   Tags:
1

Mechanical Signaling and the Cellular Response to Extracellular Matrix in Angiogenesis and Cardiovascular Physiology

http://circres.ahajournals.org
Year of publication: 
2002
Journal name: 
Circulation Research
Great advances have been made in the identification of the soluble angiogenic factors, insoluble extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules, and receptor signaling pathways that mediate control of angiogenesis—the growth of blood capillaries. This review focuses on work that explores how endothelial cells integrate these chemical signals with mechanical cues from their local tissue microenvironment so as to produce functional capillary networks that exhibit specialized form as well as function. Read more »

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