PLoS ONE (Jan 2010)

Fluidization and resolidification of the human bladder smooth muscle cell in response to transient stretch.

  • Cheng Chen,
  • Ramaswamy Krishnan,
  • Enhua Zhou,
  • Aruna Ramachandran,
  • Dhananjay Tambe,
  • Kavitha Rajendran,
  • Rosalyn M Adam,
  • Linhong Deng,
  • Jeffrey J Fredberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0012035
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 8
p. e12035

Abstract

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Cells resident in certain hollow organs are subjected routinely to large transient stretches, including every adherent cell resident in lungs, heart, great vessels, gut, and bladder. We have shown recently that in response to a transient stretch the adherent eukaryotic cell promptly fluidizes and then gradually resolidifies, but mechanism is not yet understood.In the isolated human bladder smooth muscle cell, here we applied a 10% transient stretch while measuring cell traction forces, elastic modulus, F-actin imaging and the F-actin/G-actin ratio. Immediately after a transient stretch, F-actin levels and cell stiffness were lower by about 50%, and traction forces were lower by about 70%, both indicative of prompt fluidization. Within 5 min, F-actin levels recovered completely, cell stiffness recovered by about 90%, and traction forces recovered by about 60%, all indicative of resolidification. The extent of the fluidization response was uninfluenced by a variety of signaling inhibitors, and, surprisingly, was localized to the unstretch phase of the stretch-unstretch maneuver in a manner suggestive of cytoskeletal catch bonds. When we applied an "unstretch-restretch" (transient compression), rather than a "stretch-unstretch" (transient stretch), the cell did not fluidize and the actin network did not depolymerize.Taken together, these results implicate extremely rapid actin disassembly in the fluidization response, and slow actin reassembly in the resolidification response. In the bladder smooth muscle cell, the fluidization response to transient stretch occurs not through signaling pathways, but rather through release of increased tensile forces that drive acute disassociation of actin.