Chapter title |
Ion Channels Activated by Mechanical Forces in Bacterial and Eukaryotic Cells
|
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Chapter number | 28 |
Book title |
High Pressure Bioscience
|
Published in |
Sub cellular biochemistry, January 2015
|
DOI | 10.1007/978-94-017-9918-8_28 |
Pubmed ID | |
Book ISBNs |
978-9-40-179917-1, 978-9-40-179918-8
|
Authors |
Masahiro Sokabe, Yasuyuki Sawada, Takeshi Kobayashi, Sokabe, Masahiro, Sawada, Yasuyuki, Kobayashi, Takeshi |
Abstract |
Since the first discovery of mechanosensitive ion channel (MSC) in non-sensory cells in 1984, a variety of MSCs has been identified both in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. One of the central issues concerning MSCs is to understand the molecular and biophysical mechanisms of how mechanical forces activate/open MSCs. It has been well established that prokaryotic (mostly bacterial) MSCs are activated exclusively by membrane tension. Thus the problem to be solved with prokaryotic MSCs is the mechanisms how the MSC proteins receive tensile forces from the lipid bilayer and utilize them for channel opening. On the other hand, the activation of many eukaryotic MSCs crucially depends on tension in the actin cytoskeleton. By using the actin cytoskeleton as a force sensing antenna, eukaryotic MSCs have obtained sophisticated functions such as remote force sensing and force-direction sensing, which bacterial MSCs do not have. Actin cytoskeletons also give eukaryotic MSCs an interesting and important function called "active touch sensing", by which cells can sense rigidity of their substrates. The contractile actin cytoskeleton stress fiber (SF) anchors its each end to a focal adhesion (FA) and pulls the substrate to generate substrate-rigidity-dependent stresses in the FA. It has been found that those stresses are sensed by some Ca(2+)-permeable MSCs existing in the vicinity of FAs, thus the MSCs work as a substrate rigidity sensor that can transduce the rigidity into intracellular Ca(2+) levels. This short review, roughly constituting of two parts, deals with molecular and biophysical mechanisms underlying the MSC activation process mostly based on our recent studies; (1) structure-function in bacterial MSCs activation at the atomic level, and (2) roles of actin cytoskeletons in the activation of eukaryotic MSCs. |
Mendeley readers
Geographical breakdown
Country | Count | As % |
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United Kingdom | 1 | 13% |
Unknown | 7 | 88% |
Demographic breakdown
Readers by professional status | Count | As % |
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Professor | 4 | 50% |
Student > Ph. D. Student | 2 | 25% |
Researcher | 1 | 13% |
Unknown | 1 | 13% |
Readers by discipline | Count | As % |
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Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology | 4 | 50% |
Agricultural and Biological Sciences | 1 | 13% |
Immunology and Microbiology | 1 | 13% |
Physics and Astronomy | 1 | 13% |
Unknown | 1 | 13% |