Selective Suppression of Integrin‐Ligand Binding by Single Molecular Tension Probes Mediates Directional Cell Migration

Author:

Han Seong‐Beom1,Lee Geonhui1,Kim Daesan1,Kim Jeong‐Ki1,Kim In‐San12,Kim Hae‐Won34,Kim Dong‐Hwee125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. KU‐KIST Graduate School of Converging Science and Technology Korea University Seoul 02841 Republic of Korea

2. Biomedical Research Center Korea Institute of Science and Technology Seoul 02792 Republic of Korea

3. Institute of Tissue Regeneration Engineering (ITREN) Dankook University Cheonan 31116 Republic of Korea

4. Department of Biomaterials Science in College of Dentistry & Department of Nanobiomedical Science in Graduate School Dankook University Cheonan 31116 Republic of Korea

5. Department of Integrative Energy Engineering College of Engineering Korea University Seoul 02841 Republic of Korea

Abstract

AbstractCell migration interacting with continuously changing microenvironment, is one of the most essential cellular functions, participating in embryonic development, wound repair, immune response, and cancer metastasis. The migration process is finely tuned by integrin‐mediated binding to ligand molecules. Although numerous biochemical pathways orchestrating cell adhesion and motility are identified, how subcellular forces between the cell and extracellular matrix regulate intracellular signaling for cell migration remains unclear. Here, it is showed that a molecular binding force across integrin subunits determines directional migration by regulating tension‐dependent focal contact formation and focal adhesion kinase phosphorylation. Molecular binding strength between integrin αvβ3 and fibronectin is precisely manipulated by developing molecular tension probes that control the mechanical tolerance applied to cell‐substrate interfaces. This data reveals that integrin‐mediated molecular binding force reduction suppresses cell spreading and focal adhesion formation, attenuating the focal adhesion kinase (FAK) phosphorylation that regulates the persistence of cell migration. These results further demonstrate that manipulating subcellular binding forces at the molecular level can recapitulate differential cell migration in response to changes of substrate rigidity that determines the physical condition of extracellular microenvironment. Novel insights is provided into the subcellular mechanics behind global mechanical adaptation of the cell to surrounding tissue environments featuring distinct biophysical signatures.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Science and ICT, South Korea

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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