AI Article Synopsis

  • Cells can sense mechanical forces in their environment and transmit these forces over long distances, affecting their behavior.
  • A theoretical model shows that glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) increase the stiffness of collagen networks and impede the alignment of collagen fibers, which is crucial for effective cellular communication.
  • Experimental validation demonstrated that collagen fibers in GAG-enriched environments align less compared to those in pure collagen, suggesting GAGs play a significant role in force transmission in the extracellular matrix.

Article Abstract

Cells can sense and respond to mechanical forces in fibrous extracellular matrices (ECMs) over distances much greater than their size. This phenomenon, termed long-range force transmission, is enabled by the realignment (buckling) of collagen fibers along directions where the forces are tensile (compressive). However, whether other key structural components of the ECM, in particular glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), can affect the efficiency of cellular force transmission remains unclear. Here we developed a theoretical model of force transmission in collagen networks with interpenetrating GAGs, capturing the competition between tension-driven collagen fiber alignment and the swelling pressure induced by GAGs. Using this model, we show that the swelling pressure provided by GAGs increases the stiffness of the collagen network by stretching the fibers in an isotropic manner. We found that the GAG-induced swelling pressure can help collagen fibers resist buckling as the cells exert contractile forces. This mechanism impedes the alignment of collagen fibers and decreases long-range cellular mechanical communication. We experimentally validated the theoretical predictions by comparing the intensity of collagen fiber alignment between cellular spheroids cultured on collagen gels versus collagen–GAG cogels. We found significantly lower intensities of aligned collagen in collagen–GAG cogels, consistent with the prediction that GAGs can prevent collagen fiber alignment. The role of GAGs in modulating force transmission uncovered in this work can be extended to understand pathological processes such as the formation of fibrotic scars and cancer metastasis, where cells communicate in the presence of abnormally high concentrations of GAGs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9169665PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2116718119DOI Listing

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