Close

Actin dynamics sustains spatial gradients of membrane tension in adherent cells

Juan Manuel García-Arcos, Amine Mehidi, Julissa Sánchez Velázquez, Pau Guillamat, Caterina Tomba, Laura Houzet, Laura Capolupo, Giovanni D’Angelo, Adai Colom, Elizabeth Hinde, Charlotte Aumeier, Aurélien Roux

Posted on: 29 July 2024 , updated on: 1 August 2024

Preprint posted on 17 July 2024

Flipper-TR reveals the secrets behind membrane tension gradients.

Selected by Vibha SINGH

Categories: biophysics, cell biology

Background.

Membrane tension is crucial for coordinating various cellular functions such as exocytosis and endocytosis, migration, signaling, and actin polymerization. Although pure lipid membranes show rapid tension spread, which might impede noticeable gradients, adhered supported bilayers and migrating cells have been described to exhibit tension gradients. Previous studies’ calculation of tension gradients relies on tether-pulling experiments, which have participation from plasma membrane tension, membrane-cytoskeleton, and lipid bilayer bending rigidity, all of which are composition-dependent, and limited in spatial resolution. In this preprint, an advanced tension probe, Flipper-TR, has been used to accurately measure tension gradients and the underlying mechanism that sustains them in the cells. Flipper-TR is a fluorescent probe that targets the plasma membrane, reporting tension changes through alterations in its fluorescence lifetime. It integrates into the plasma membrane and fluoresces only within a lipid environment, allowing quantitative analysis of spatial tension distribution and propagation upon mechanical alteration (Colom A et.al; Nature Chem. 2018). In this preprint branched actin and membrane-cortex attachment are proposed to establish membrane tension gradients in all adherent cells: migrating and non-migrating

Key findings of the study.

(a) Flipper-TR detects tension gradients in supported membranes and cells. Flipper-TR can efficiently report membrane tension gradients in reconstituted model membranes as well as in migrating cells by measuring variations in lifetime values. In an expanding model membrane system, Flipper-TR lifetime values exhibit tension gradients dependent on lipid composition and spreading speed. Furthermore, several migrating cell types including keratinocytes, U2OS, RPE1, HeLa, and Cos7 demonstrate large lifetime differences between the front (high tension) and rear (low tension), with robust differences for persistently migrating cells. To identify the underlying mechanism, the authors examined cell edge dynamics and Flipper-TR lifetime correlation.  They found that front protrusion speed, and therefore actin polymerization, are positively correlated with high tension in the front.

(b) Tension gradients exist in non-migratory cells. No significant difference was observed between different shapes of micropatterned cells, and tension gradients exist between the dorsal (high) and ventral (low) planes across shapes. This confirms that cell edge and micropattern boundary are the principal determinants of Flipper-TR lifetime values. Actin protrusion at the cell edge is crucial for high tension and micropattern boundaries decrease tension. These two effects are accountable for gradient formation in non-migratory cells.

(c) Lipid Composition and diffusion. Patterned cells have a uniform distribution of main lipids like phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) suggesting tension gradient is not due to variations in these abundant main lipids. Less abundant lipids such as ceramide (Cer), sphingomyelin (SM), and globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) show moderate spatial gradients. Overall, the tension gradient is independent of lipid composition. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) confirms no significant lipid flow across different cell regions, indicating gradients are maintained despite the absence of lipid flow. Moreover, lipid diffusion barriers at the cell edges suggested by fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy (FFS) measurements may contribute to the persistence of tension gradients.

 (d) Actin cytoskeleton and membrane tension. Latrunculin A and JLY-induced inhibition of actin dynamics abolished membrane ruffles and led to uniform distribution of membrane tension, signifying actin polymerization is necessary to maintain tension gradients. Pharmacological treatments promoting lamellipodia formation increased membrane tension, whereas treatments promoting filopodia decreased membrane tension. Ezrin inhibition weakened membrane-to-cortex attachment, resulting in higher tension at protrusion and faster tension dissipation away from protrusions.

 (e) Substrate Rigidity and Adhesion. Less rigid substrates displayed weakened tension gradients leading to nearly uniform tension, demonstrating that substrate stiffness impacts the magnitude of membrane tension gradients. Reducing adhesion strength through specific inhibitors (e.g., Cilengitide) also leads to a more uniform distribution of membrane tension, emphasizing the contribution of adhesion in creating and maintaining tension gradients. Bleb-based migrating cells, devoid of adhesion, display a lack of tension gradients. This implies that a membrane tension gradient is not imperative for migration. Taken together, this preprint highlights the multifaceted interplay between lipid composition, actin cytoskeleton dynamics, and substrate properties responsible for membrane tension gradients.

Significance of the study.

 

Figure 1: (Reproduced from the preprint Fig.5H). Conceptual model of membrane tension gradient maintenance. The diagram shows tension variation across the cell, highlighting high tension on the dorsal side and gradients on the ventral side. Key factors include branched actin filaments (red), cellular adhesions, and clathrin plaques (blue) acting as barriers, creating tension gradients, and directing lipid flow, crucial for cellular processes like movement and signaling.

Diffusion barriers are key in sustaining membrane tension gradients, as no significant lipid flow was observed. This contradicts previous studies that imply lipid flow regulates tension gradients, underscoring the context-specific mechanisms in cell biology. The dependence of tension gradients on cell-ECM adhesion strength and substrate rigidity further reinforces that adhesion is crucial for tension distribution (Figure 1).

What do I like most about the preprint?

The novel application of Flipper-TR as a real-time quantitative membrane tension probe is the most striking feature of the preprint. The study depicts a comprehensive and dynamic assessment of the formation of tension gradients within adherent cells, migrating and non-migrating by integrating innovative tools with advanced imaging and analytical approaches. The conclusions from the preprint not only advance our understanding of the membrane mechanical properties but also resolve former theories on tension propagation and its reliance on adhesion and cytoskeletal dynamics.

Tags: actin dynamics, actomyosin, biophysics, cell mechanics, cell migration, cytoskeleton, membrane tension

doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/prelights.37980

Read preprint (No Ratings Yet)

Author's response

Juan Manuel García-Arcos shared

Open questions.

(1) How does actin polymerization versus actin turnover affect membrane tension gradients?

This is a very interesting question! Polymerization and turnover are somewhat related but refer to different processes.

In HeLa cells, actin polymerization is mainly driven by Arp2/3 and mDia1 (Bovellan et al., Curr Biol 2014). Both contribute similarly in terms of total F-actin content, but the types of networks they nucleate have different nanostructures (branched versus linear), which give rise to different cortical mechanical properties. Our preprint shows that branched actin is the major mechano-transducer between the cortex and the plasma membrane. This is not entirely new; other groups have highlighted the specific role of branched networks during endocytosis and cell spreading. However, we demonstrate that adhesion is fundamental in maintaining spatial heterogeneities. I find it particularly interesting that branched networks retain this mechano-transducing role in various cellular processes.

The concept of actin turnover is broader: turnover is driven by many processes, including the growth and depolymerization of actin filaments, monomer availability, and crosslinkers. Turnover is an important parameter to model cortex mechanics and is typically measured by FRAP. In lamellipodia, actin turnover is highest at the leading edge. The areas of high Flipper-TR lifetime seem to correlate with areas of high actin turnover. Indeed, it is conceivable that the tension values reported by Flipper-TR relate to the way actin and the membrane interact at the molecular level. Protrusion areas also exhibit low membrane-cortex attachment (Bisaria et al., Science 2020). While we have not extensively explored this avenue, it is intriguing. To study this further, we could use optogenetics to control specific components of the cortex or dynamically measure turnover and Flipper-TR lifetime (membrane tension / lipidic order). Two main limitations exist: Flipper-TR occupies two spectral channels in a similar lifetime band as major fluorescent proteins, and confocal FLIM has relatively poor time resolution (10 seconds at best).

(2) Could signaling pathways, for instance, RhoA GTPase locally adjust actin and myosin dynamics to generate tension gradient in non-adherent cells?

Rho GTPases control protrusions and cortical dynamics and can generally shift the cell from a lamellipodia-dominated to a filopodia-dominated morphology. De Belly, Yan et al. (Cell 2023) demonstrated beautifully how optogenetic control of Rho-GTPases can generate long-range membrane tension. In their study, the cells were not adherent, so tension was uniformly distributed. According to our model, non-adherent cells should not display significant spatial heterogeneity in membrane tension. However, in the case of adherent cells, one might expect that local activation of Rac1 could, for example, increase Flipper-TR lifetime. The same limitations I mentioned earlier apply, but we are working to overcome them in follow-up studies. If it proves that signaling can influence membrane organization, it would be a very cool result. I think this is the next frontier!

References.

Colom, A., Derivery, E., Soleimanpour, S. et al. A fluorescent membrane tension probe. Nature Chem 10, 1118–1125 (2018).

Bovellan M, Romeo Y, Biro M, Boden A, Chugh P, Yonis A, Vaghela M, Fritzsche M, Moulding D, Thorogate R, Jégou A, Thrasher AJ, Romet-Lemonne G, Roux PP, Paluch EK, Charras G. Cellular control of cortical actin nucleation. Curr Biol. 2014 Jul 21;24(14):1628-1635.

Bisaria A, Hayer A, Garbett D, Cohen D, Meyer T. Membrane-proximal F-actin restricts local membrane protrusions and directs cell migration. Science. 2020 Jun 12;368(6496):1205-1210.

De Belly H, Yan S, Borja da Rocha H, Ichbiah S, Town JP, Zager PJ, Estrada DC, Meyer K, Turlier H, Bustamante C, Weiner OD. Cell protrusions and contractions generate long-range membrane tension propagation. Cell. 2023 Jul 6;186(14):3049-3061.

Have your say

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sign up to customise the site to your preferences and to receive alerts

Register here

Also in the biophysics category:

Global coordination of protrusive forces in migrating immune cells

Patricia Reis-Rodrigues, Nikola Canigova, Mario J. Avellaneda, et al.

Selected by 10 October 2024

yohalie kalukula

Biophysics

Engineered Nanotopographies Induce Transient Openings in the Nuclear Membrane

Einollah Sarikhani, Vrund Patel, Zhi Li, et al.

Selected by 23 September 2024

Sristilekha Nath

Bioengineering

Spiral-eyes: A soft active matter model of in vivo corneal epithelial cell migration

Kaja Kostanjevec, Rastko Sknepnek, Jon Martin Collinson, et al.

Selected by 03 September 2024

Prasanna Padmanaban

Biophysics

Also in the cell biology category:

Golgi compaction facilitates microtubule nucleation to drive adult vertebrate peripheral neuron regeneration

Alice E Mortimer, Adam J Reid, Raman M Das

Selected by 15 October 2024

Vibha SINGH

Cell Biology

Non-disruptive inducible labeling of ER-membrane contact sites using the Lamin B Receptor

Laura Downie, Nuria Ferrandiz, Megan Jones, et al.

Selected by 15 October 2024

Jonathan Townson

Cell Biology

HIF1A contributes to the survival of aneuploid and mosaic pre-implantation embryos

Estefania Sanchez-Vasquez, Marianne E. Bronner, Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz

Selected by 11 October 2024

Anchel De Jaime Soguero

Developmental Biology

Also in the cell biology category:

BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting

This preList features preprints that were discussed and presented during the BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting in Birmingham, UK in April 2024. Kindly put together by Sara Morais da Silva, Reviews Editor at Journal of Cell Science.

 



List by Reinier Prosee

‘In preprints’ from Development 2022-2023

A list of the preprints featured in Development's 'In preprints' articles between 2022-2023

 



List by Alex Eve, Katherine Brown

preLights peer support – preprints of interest

This is a preprint repository to organise the preprints and preLights covered through the 'preLights peer support' initiative.

 



List by preLights peer support

The Society for Developmental Biology 82nd Annual Meeting

This preList is made up of the preprints discussed during the Society for Developmental Biology 82nd Annual Meeting that took place in Chicago in July 2023.

 



List by Joyce Yu, Katherine Brown

CSHL 87th Symposium: Stem Cells

Preprints mentioned by speakers at the #CSHLsymp23

 



List by Alex Eve

Journal of Cell Science meeting ‘Imaging Cell Dynamics’

This preList highlights the preprints discussed at the JCS meeting 'Imaging Cell Dynamics'. The meeting was held from 14 - 17 May 2023 in Lisbon, Portugal and was organised by Erika Holzbaur, Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, Rob Parton and Michael Way.

 



List by Helen Zenner

9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination

This preList contains preprints discussed during the 9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination. This conference was held in Kona, Hawaii from April 17th to 21st 2023.

 



List by Martin Estermann

Alumni picks – preLights 5th Birthday

This preList contains preprints that were picked and highlighted by preLights Alumni - an initiative that was set up to mark preLights 5th birthday. More entries will follow throughout February and March 2023.

 



List by Sergio Menchero et al.

CellBio 2022 – An ASCB/EMBO Meeting

This preLists features preprints that were discussed and presented during the CellBio 2022 meeting in Washington, DC in December 2022.

 



List by Nadja Hümpfer et al.

Fibroblasts

The advances in fibroblast biology preList explores the recent discoveries and preprints of the fibroblast world. Get ready to immerse yourself with this list created for fibroblasts aficionados and lovers, and beyond. Here, my goal is to include preprints of fibroblast biology, heterogeneity, fate, extracellular matrix, behavior, topography, single-cell atlases, spatial transcriptomics, and their matrix!

 



List by Osvaldo Contreras

EMBL Synthetic Morphogenesis: From Gene Circuits to Tissue Architecture (2021)

A list of preprints mentioned at the #EESmorphoG virtual meeting in 2021.

 



List by Alex Eve

FENS 2020

A collection of preprints presented during the virtual meeting of the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) in 2020

 



List by Ana Dorrego-Rivas

Planar Cell Polarity – PCP

This preList contains preprints about the latest findings on Planar Cell Polarity (PCP) in various model organisms at the molecular, cellular and tissue levels.

 



List by Ana Dorrego-Rivas

BioMalPar XVI: Biology and Pathology of the Malaria Parasite

[under construction] Preprints presented at the (fully virtual) EMBL BioMalPar XVI, 17-18 May 2020 #emblmalaria

 



List by Dey Lab, Samantha Seah

1

Cell Polarity

Recent research from the field of cell polarity is summarized in this list of preprints. It comprises of studies focusing on various forms of cell polarity ranging from epithelial polarity, planar cell polarity to front-to-rear polarity.

 



List by Yamini Ravichandran

TAGC 2020

Preprints recently presented at the virtual Allied Genetics Conference, April 22-26, 2020. #TAGC20

 



List by Maiko Kitaoka et al.

3D Gastruloids

A curated list of preprints related to Gastruloids (in vitro models of early development obtained by 3D aggregation of embryonic cells). Updated until July 2021.

 



List by Paul Gerald L. Sanchez and Stefano Vianello

ECFG15 – Fungal biology

Preprints presented at 15th European Conference on Fungal Genetics 17-20 February 2020 Rome

 



List by Hiral Shah

ASCB EMBO Annual Meeting 2019

A collection of preprints presented at the 2019 ASCB EMBO Meeting in Washington, DC (December 7-11)

 



List by Madhuja Samaddar et al.

EMBL Seeing is Believing – Imaging the Molecular Processes of Life

Preprints discussed at the 2019 edition of Seeing is Believing, at EMBL Heidelberg from the 9th-12th October 2019

 



List by Dey Lab

Autophagy

Preprints on autophagy and lysosomal degradation and its role in neurodegeneration and disease. Includes molecular mechanisms, upstream signalling and regulation as well as studies on pharmaceutical interventions to upregulate the process.

 



List by Sandra Malmgren Hill

Lung Disease and Regeneration

This preprint list compiles highlights from the field of lung biology.

 



List by Rob Hynds

Cellular metabolism

A curated list of preprints related to cellular metabolism at Biorxiv by Pablo Ranea Robles from the Prelights community. Special interest on lipid metabolism, peroxisomes and mitochondria.

 



List by Pablo Ranea Robles

BSCB/BSDB Annual Meeting 2019

Preprints presented at the BSCB/BSDB Annual Meeting 2019

 



List by Dey Lab

MitoList

This list of preprints is focused on work expanding our knowledge on mitochondria in any organism, tissue or cell type, from the normal biology to the pathology.

 



List by Sandra Franco Iborra

ASCB/EMBO Annual Meeting 2018

This list relates to preprints that were discussed at the recent ASCB conference.

 



List by Dey Lab, Amanda Haage
Close