iScience (Apr 2019)
Mechanical Communication Acts as a Noise Filter
Abstract
Summary: Cells can communicate mechanically by responding to mechanical deformations generated by their neighbors. Here, we describe a new role for mechanical communication by demonstrating that mechanical coupling between cells acts as a signaling cue that reduces intrinsic noise in the interacting cells. We measure mechanical interaction between beating cardiac cells cultured on a patterned flexible substrate and find that beat-to-beat variability decays exponentially with coupling strength. To demonstrate that such noise reduction is indeed a direct consequence of mechanical coupling, we reproduce the exponential decay in an assay where a beating cell interacts mechanically with an artificial stochastic ‘mechanical cell’. The mechanical cell consists of a probe that mimics the deformations generated by a stochastically beating neighboring cardiac cell. We show that noise reduction through mechanical coupling persists long after stimulation stops and identify microtubule integrity, NOX2, and CaMKII as mediators of noise reduction. : Biological Sciences; Cell Biology; Physical Sciences Subject Areas: Physical sciences: biophysics, cell mechanics, Biological Sciences: cell biology, cardiac biology