Recent results indicate that, in addition to chemical cues, mechanical stimuli may also impact neuronal growth. For instance, unlike most other cell types, neurons prefer soft substrates. However, the mechanisms responsible for the neuronal affinity for soft substrates have not yet been identified. In this study, we show that, in vitro, neurons continuously probe their mechanical environment. Growth cones visibly deform substrates with a compliance commensurate with their own. To understand the sensing of stiff substrates by growth cones, we investigated their precise temporal response to well-defined mechanical stress. When the applied stress exceeded a threshold of 274 +/- 41 pN/microm(2), neurons retracted and re-extended their processes, thereby enabling exploration of alternative directions. A calcium influx through stretch-activated ion channels and the detachment of adhesion sites were prerequisites for this retraction. Our data illustrate how growing neurons may detect and avoid stiff substrates--as a mechanism involved in axonal branch pruning--and provide what we believe is novel support of the idea that mechanics may act as guidance cue for neuronal growth.
The actin filaments of the cytoskeleton form a highly dynamic polymer scaffold which is actively involved in many essential mechanisms such as cell migration, transport, mitosis, and mechanosensitivity. We treated CHO-K1 cells with different concentrations of the actin cytoskeleton disrupting drug cytochalasin D. Then investigating the cells' elastic behaviour by scanning force microscopy-based rheology we confirmed for high cytochalasin D concentrations (> or =1.5 microM) a significant decrease of mechanical stability. At lower concentrations we measured no significant softening, but flattening and a horizontal contraction was observable even at low concentrations (> or =0.3 microM) of cytochalasin D. The observed changes in cell shape resulted in a lower cell volume, showing that there is compensation by volume for small decreases in cytoskeletal strength resulting from reduced numbers or lengths of actin filaments. These results suggest that the characteristic functions defining a cell's mechanical stability such as mechanosensitivity can be maintained via small changes in cell volume in order to counter fluctuations in cytoskeletal composition.
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