nucleus

1

The effects of osmotic stress on the structure and function of the cell nucleus.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Year of publication: 
2009
Journal name: 
J. Cell. Biochem
Osmotic stress is a potent regulator of the normal function of cells that are exposed to osmotically active environments under physiologic or pathologic conditions. The ability of cells to alter gene expression and metabolic activity in response to changes in the osmotic environment provides an additional regulatory mechanism for a diverse array of tissues and organs in the human body. In addition to the activation of various osmotically- or volume-activated ion channels, osmotic stress may also act on the genome via a direct biophysical pathway. Read more »
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 31 weeks 1 day ago – Made popular 31 weeks 1 day ago
Category: Adherens Junctions   Tags:
1

Nuclear mechanotransduction: Response of the lamina to extracellular stress with implications in aging

http://www.jbiomech.com
Year of publication: 
2008
Journal name: 
Journal of Biomechanics
Mechnotransduction, the phenomenon by which cells respond to applied force, is necessary for normal cell processes and is implicated in the pathology of several diseases including atherosclerosis. The exact mechanisms which govern how forces can affect gene expression have not been determined, but putative direct force effects on the genome would require transduction through the nuclear lamina. In this study we show that nuclei in cells exposed to shear stress significantly change shape, upregulate nuclear lamins and move lamins from the nuclear interior to the nuclear periphery. Read more »
1

Mechanotransduction in Cardiac Myocytes

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com
Year of publication: 
2006
Journal name: 
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Cardiac myocytes react to diverse mechanical demands with a multitude of transient and long-term responses to normalize the cellular mechanical environment. Several stretch-activated signaling pathways have been identified, most prominently guanine nucleotide binding proteins (G-proteins), mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK), Janus-associated kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK/STAT), protein kinase C (PKC), calcineurin, intracellular calcium regulation, and several autocrine and paracrine factors. Multiple levels of crosstalk exist between pathways. Read more »
ashleykita's picture
Created by ashleykita 31 weeks 5 days ago
Category: Cardiovascular   Tags:

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