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      Tensegrity: the architectural basis of cellular mechanotransduction.

      1
      Annual review of physiology
      Annual Reviews
      NASA Discipline Cell Biology, Non-NASA Center

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          Abstract

          Physical forces of gravity, hemodynamic stresses, and movement play a critical role in tissue development. Yet, little is known about how cells convert these mechanical signals into a chemical response. This review attempts to place the potential molecular mediators of mechanotransduction (e.g. stretch-sensitive ion channels, signaling molecules, cytoskeleton, integrins) within the context of the structural complexity of living cells. The model presented relies on recent experimental findings, which suggests that cells use tensegrity architecture for their organization. Tensegrity predicts that cells are hard-wired to respond immediately to mechanical stresses transmitted over cell surface receptors that physically couple the cytoskeleton to extracellular matrix (e.g. integrins) or to other cells (cadherins, selectins, CAMs). Many signal transducing molecules that are activated by cell binding to growth factors and extracellular matrix associate with cytoskeletal scaffolds within focal adhesion complexes. Mechanical signals, therefore, may be integrated with other environmental signals and transduced into a biochemical response through force-dependent changes in scaffold geometry or molecular mechanics. Tensegrity also provides a mechanism to focus mechanical energy on molecular transducers and to orchestrate and tune the cellular response.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Annu Rev Physiol
          Annual review of physiology
          Annual Reviews
          0066-4278
          0066-4278
          1997
          : 59
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Pathology, Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
          Article
          10.1146/annurev.physiol.59.1.575
          9074778
          b2a65d04-58cf-419c-b5ef-ab68f5b17e0e
          History

          NASA Discipline Cell Biology,Non-NASA Center
          NASA Discipline Cell Biology, Non-NASA Center

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