Journal of Biomechanical Science and Engineering (Mar 2012)

High Time Resolution Time-Lapse Imaging Reveals Continuous Existence and Rotation of Stress Fibers under Cyclic Stretch in HUVEC

  • Yusuke MITSUOKA,
  • Akira TSUKAMOTO,
  • Shunsuke IWAYOSHI,
  • Katsuko S. FURUKAWA,
  • Takashi USHIDA

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1299/jbse.7.188
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 188 – 198

Abstract

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Cells under cyclic stretch sense their environments and induce responses such as actin stress fiber (SF) reorientation and morphological changes. These physiological responses are thought to occur when cells sense incompatibility between SF orientation and stretching direction. This hypothesis requires existence of SFs. However, such existence of SFs in cells under cyclic stretch remains unclear since few studies attempted to track the existence of SFs throughout cyclic stretch. In order to track the existence of SFs throughout cyclic stretch, high time resolution time-lapse imaging was improved in two points. First, SFs were clearly imaged with coexpression of DsRed-zyxin and GFP-actin. Second, time resolution was improved so that fluorescence images were obtained every 28 sec. With the improved high time resolution time-lapse imaging, it was revealed, for the first time, that SFs could exist continuously throughout cyclic stretch. Moreover, physiological responses including morphological change as well as SF reorientation occurred during the time when SFs formed incompatibility between SF orientation and stretching direction. These results demonstrated that SFs continuously existed in cells under cyclic stretch and in turn suggested that continuous presence of incompatibility between orientation of long-lasting SFs and the stretching direction might be important for mechanosensing which induces physiological responses.

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