AI Article Synopsis

  • There is evidence that the mechanical properties of central nervous system (CNS) neurons influence cellular activities, particularly through mechanical stimuli.
  • Using oscillatory optical tweezers, researchers found that a local indentation force greater than 13 pN triggers a brief increase in intracellular calcium levels, while repeated stimulations lead to a sustained response.
  • The study indicates that these mechanical signals rely on calcium entering through ion channels, which activates specific proteins like CAMKII and RhoA, highlighting the importance of mechanical signaling in neuronal networks.

Article Abstract

There is growing evidence suggesting that mechanical properties of CNS neurons may play an important regulatory role in cellular processes. Here, we employ an oscillatory optical tweezers (OOT) to exert a local indentation with forces in the range of 5-50 pN. We found that single local indentation above a threshold of 13 ± 1 pN evokes a transient intracellular calcium change, whereas repeated mechanical stimulations induce a more sustained and variable calcium response. Importantly, neurons were able to differentiate the magnitude of mechanical stimuli. Chemical perturbation and whole-cell patch clamp recordings suggest that mechanically evoked response requires the influx of extracellular calcium through transmembrane ion channels. Moreover, we observed a mechanically evoked activation of the CAMKII and small G protein RhoA. These results all together suggest that mechanical signaling among developed neurons fully operates in neuronal networks under physiological conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8851107PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2022.103807DOI Listing

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