Microtubules can bear enhanced compressive loads in living cells because of lateral reinforcement
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 5 June 2006
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 173 (5), 733-741
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200601060
Abstract
Cytoskeletal microtubules have been proposed to influence cell shape and mechanics based on their ability to resist large-scale compressive forces exerted by the surrounding contractile cytoskeleton. Consistent with this, cytoplasmic microtubules are often highly curved and appear buckled because of compressive loads. However, the results of in vitro studies suggest that microtubules should buckle at much larger length scales, withstanding only exceedingly small compressive forces. This discrepancy calls into question the structural role of microtubules, and highlights our lack of quantitative knowledge of the magnitude of the forces they experience and can withstand in living cells. We show that intracellular microtubules do bear large-scale compressive loads from a variety of physiological forces, but their buckling wavelength is reduced significantly because of mechanical coupling to the surrounding elastic cytoskeleton. We quantitatively explain this behavior, and show that this coupling dramatically increases the compressive forces that microtubules can sustain, suggesting they can make a more significant structural contribution to the mechanical behavior of the cell than previously thought possible.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Roles of Polymerization Dynamics, Opposed Motors, and a Tensile Element in Governing the Length ofXenopusExtract Meiotic SpindlesMolecular Biology of the Cell, 2005
- Force generation by dynamic microtubulesCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 2005
- Converging Populations of F-Actin Promote Breakage of Associated Microtubules to Spatially Regulate Microtubule Turnover in Migrating CellsCurrent Biology, 2002
- Filopodia and actin arcs guide the assembly and transport of two populations of microtubules with unique dynamic parameters in neuronal growth conesThe Journal of cell biology, 2002
- Actomyosin-based Retrograde Flow of Microtubules in the Lamella of Migrating Epithelial Cells Influences Microtubule Dynamic Instability and Turnover and Is Associated with Microtubule Breakage and TreadmillingThe Journal of cell biology, 1997
- Traction fibre: Toward a “tensegral” model of the spindleCell Motility, 1997
- Cytoskeletal Plasticity in Cells Expressing Neuronal Microtubule-Associated ProteinsNeuron, 1996
- Intermediate Filaments May Prevent Buckling of Compressively Loaded MicrotubulesJournal of Biomechanical Engineering, 1990
- Cross‐Linking of Intermediate Filaments to Microtubules by Microtubule‐Associated Protein 2Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1985
- Microtubules and microfilaments in newt neurulationDevelopmental Biology, 1971