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Sustained strain applied at high rates drives dynamic tensioning in epithelial cells

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Epithelial cells experience long lasting loads of different magnitudes and rates. How they adapt to these loads strongly impacts tissue health. Yet, much remains unknown about the evolution of cellular stress in response to sustained strain. Here, by subjecting cell pairs to sustained strain, we report a bimodal stress response, where in addition to the typically observed stress relaxation, a subset of cells exhibits a dynamic tensioning process with significant elevation in stress within 100 s, resembling active pulling-back in muscle fibers. Strikingly, the fraction of cells exhibiting tensioning increases with increasing strain rate. The tensioning response is accompanied by actin remodeling, and perturbation to actin abrogates it, supporting cell contractility’s role in the response. Collectively, our data show that epithelial cells adjust their tensional states over short timescales in a strain-rate dependent manner to adapt to sustained strains, demonstrating that the active pulling-back behavior could be a common protective mechanism against environmental stress.

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Acknowledgements: R.Y. acknowledges fundings from the NSF (award #1826135, #2143997), and the NIH National Institutes of General Medical Sciences (R35GM150623). C.H. acknowledges the Ministry of Education (MOE), Singapore, under its Academic Research Fund Tier 1(RG74/23). G.C. was supported by an sLOLA grant from the British Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC, grant no. BB/V019015/1) and a Physics of Life grant from the British Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC grant no. EP/W023806/1).

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Journal Title

Communications Biology

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Journal ISSN

2399-3642

Volume Title

8

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Sponsorship
National Science Foundation (NSF) (1826135, 2143997)