Heliyon (Jan 2025)
Molecular dynamics model of mechanophore sensors for biological force measurement
Abstract
Cellular forces regulate an untold spectrum of living processes, such as cell migration, gene expression, and ion conduction. However, a quantitative description of mechanical control remains elusive due to the lack of general, live-cell tools to measure discrete forces between biomolecules. Here we introduce a computational pipeline for force measurement that leverages well-defined, tunable release of a mechanically activated small molecule fluorophore. These sensors are characterized using a multiscale approach combining equilibrium and steered QM/MM molecular dynamics models to capture the chemical, mechanical, and conformational transitions underlying force activation thresholds on a nano Newton scale. We find that chemical modification of the mechanophore and variation of its biomolecular tethers can tune the rate-determining step for fluorophore release and adjust the mechanochemical activation barrier. The models offer a new molecular framework for calibrated, programmable biomolecular force reporting within the live-cell regime, opening new opportunities to study mechanical phenomena in biological systems.