posted on 2024-08-12, 14:39authored byJ. Dale Combs, Alexander K. Foote, Hiroaki Ogasawara, Arventh Velusamy, Sk Aysha Rashid, Joseph Nicholas Mancuso, Khalid Salaita
Cells apply forces to extracellular matrix (ECM) ligands
through
transmembrane integrin receptors: an interaction which is intimately
involved in cell motility, wound healing, cancer invasion and metastasis.
These small (piconewton) integrin-ECM forces have been studied by
molecular tension fluorescence microscopy (MTFM), which utilizes a
force-induced conformational change of a probe to detect mechanical
events. MTFM has revealed the force magnitude for integrin receptors
in a variety of cell models including primary cells. However, force
dynamics and specifically the force loading rate (LR) have important
implications in receptor signaling and adhesion formation and remain
poorly characterized. Here, we develop an LR probe composed of an
engineered DNA structure that undergoes two mechanical transitions
at distinct force thresholds: a low force threshold at 4.7 pN (hairpin
unfolding) and a high force threshold at 47 pN (duplex shearing).
These transitions yield distinct fluorescence signatures observed
through single-molecule fluorescence microscopy in live cells. Automated
analysis of tens of thousands of events from eight cells showed that
the bond lifetime of integrins that engage their ligands and transmit
a force >4.7 pN decays exponentially with a τ of 45.6 s.
A subset
of these events mature in magnitude to >47 pN with a median loading
rate of 1.1 pN s–1 and primarily localize at the
periphery of the cell–substrate junction. The LR probe design
is modular and can be adapted to measure force ramp rates for a broad
range of mechanoreceptors and cell models, thus aiding in the study
of molecular mechanotransduction in living systems.