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Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells

Whether mechanically unfolded fibronectin (Fn) is present within native extracellular matrix fibrils is controversial. Fn extensibility under the influence of cell traction forces has been proposed to originate either from the force-induced lengthening of an initially compact, folded quaternary stru...

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Autores principales: Smith, Michael L, Gourdon, Delphine, Little, William C, Kubow, Kristopher E, Eguiluz, R. Andresen, Luna-Morris, Sheila, Vogel, Viola
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1994993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17914904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050268
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author Smith, Michael L
Gourdon, Delphine
Little, William C
Kubow, Kristopher E
Eguiluz, R. Andresen
Luna-Morris, Sheila
Vogel, Viola
author_facet Smith, Michael L
Gourdon, Delphine
Little, William C
Kubow, Kristopher E
Eguiluz, R. Andresen
Luna-Morris, Sheila
Vogel, Viola
author_sort Smith, Michael L
collection PubMed
description Whether mechanically unfolded fibronectin (Fn) is present within native extracellular matrix fibrils is controversial. Fn extensibility under the influence of cell traction forces has been proposed to originate either from the force-induced lengthening of an initially compact, folded quaternary structure as is found in solution (quaternary structure model, where the dimeric arms of Fn cross each other), or from the force-induced unfolding of type III modules (unfolding model). Clarification of this issue is central to our understanding of the structural arrangement of Fn within fibrils, the mechanism of fibrillogenesis, and whether cryptic sites, which are exposed by partial protein unfolding, can be exposed by cell-derived force. In order to differentiate between these two models, two fluorescence resonance energy transfer schemes to label plasma Fn were applied, with sensitivity to either compact-to-extended conformation (arm separation) without loss of secondary structure or compact-to-unfolded conformation. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer studies revealed that a significant fraction of fibrillar Fn within a three-dimensional human fibroblast matrix is partially unfolded. Complete relaxation of Fn fibrils led to a refolding of Fn. The compactly folded quaternary structure with crossed Fn arms, however, was never detected within extracellular matrix fibrils. We conclude that the resting state of Fn fibrils does not contain Fn molecules with crossed-over arms, and that the several-fold extensibility of Fn fibrils involves the unfolding of type III modules. This could imply that Fn might play a significant role in mechanotransduction processes.
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spelling pubmed-19949932007-10-27 Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells Smith, Michael L Gourdon, Delphine Little, William C Kubow, Kristopher E Eguiluz, R. Andresen Luna-Morris, Sheila Vogel, Viola PLoS Biol Research Article Whether mechanically unfolded fibronectin (Fn) is present within native extracellular matrix fibrils is controversial. Fn extensibility under the influence of cell traction forces has been proposed to originate either from the force-induced lengthening of an initially compact, folded quaternary structure as is found in solution (quaternary structure model, where the dimeric arms of Fn cross each other), or from the force-induced unfolding of type III modules (unfolding model). Clarification of this issue is central to our understanding of the structural arrangement of Fn within fibrils, the mechanism of fibrillogenesis, and whether cryptic sites, which are exposed by partial protein unfolding, can be exposed by cell-derived force. In order to differentiate between these two models, two fluorescence resonance energy transfer schemes to label plasma Fn were applied, with sensitivity to either compact-to-extended conformation (arm separation) without loss of secondary structure or compact-to-unfolded conformation. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer studies revealed that a significant fraction of fibrillar Fn within a three-dimensional human fibroblast matrix is partially unfolded. Complete relaxation of Fn fibrils led to a refolding of Fn. The compactly folded quaternary structure with crossed Fn arms, however, was never detected within extracellular matrix fibrils. We conclude that the resting state of Fn fibrils does not contain Fn molecules with crossed-over arms, and that the several-fold extensibility of Fn fibrils involves the unfolding of type III modules. This could imply that Fn might play a significant role in mechanotransduction processes. Public Library of Science 2007-10 2007-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC1994993/ /pubmed/17914904 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050268 Text en © 2007 Smith et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Smith, Michael L
Gourdon, Delphine
Little, William C
Kubow, Kristopher E
Eguiluz, R. Andresen
Luna-Morris, Sheila
Vogel, Viola
Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells
title Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells
title_full Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells
title_fullStr Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells
title_full_unstemmed Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells
title_short Force-Induced Unfolding of Fibronectin in the Extracellular Matrix of Living Cells
title_sort force-induced unfolding of fibronectin in the extracellular matrix of living cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1994993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17914904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050268
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