ARTICLE
Received 12 Dec 2014 | Accepted 24 Apr 2015 | Published 15 Jun 2015
Anita Joanna Kosmalska1,2, Laura Casares1,2, Alberto Elosegui-Artola1, Joseph Jose Thottacherry3, Roberto Moreno-Vicente4, Vctor Gonzlez-Tarrag1,2, Miguelngel del Pozo4, Satyajit Mayor3, Marino Arroyo5, Daniel Navajas1,2,6, Xavier Trepat1,2,7, Nils C. Gauthier8 & Pere Roca-Cusachs1,2
Biological processes in any physiological environment involve changes in cell shape, which must be accommodated by their physical envelopethe bilayer membrane. However, the fundamental biophysical principles by which the cell membrane allows for and responds to shape changes remain unclear. Here we show that the 3D remodelling of the membrane in response to a broad diversity of physiological perturbations can be explained by a purely mechanical process. This process is passive, local, almost instantaneous, before any active remodelling and generates different types of membrane invaginations that can repeatedly store and release large fractions of the cell membrane. We further demonstrate that the shape of those invaginations is determined by the minimum elastic and adhesive energy required to store both membrane area and liquid volume at the cellsubstrate interface. Once formed, cells reabsorb the invaginations through an active process with duration of the order of minutes.
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8292 OPEN
Physical principles of membrane remodelling during cell mechanoadaptation
1 Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC), Barcelona 08028, Spain. 2 Department of Physiological Sciences I, University of Barcelona, Barcelona 08036, Spain. 3 National Centre for Biological Sciences (TIFR), Bangalore 560065, India. 4 Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC), Madrid 28029, Spain. 5 LaCN, Universitat Politcnica de Catalunya-BarcelonaTech, Barcelona 08034, Spain. 6 Ciber Enfermedades Respiratorias, Madrid 28029, Spain. 7 Instituci Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avanats (ICREA), Barcelona 08010, Spain. 8 Mechanobiology Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117411, Singapore. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to N.C.G. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ) or to P.R.-C. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ).
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8292
Physiological processes in development, wound healing, breathing or any other scenario generally involve cell shape variations, which are constrained by the physical envelope
of cellsthe plasma membrane. In any such process, the plasma membrane must adapt to often fast cell rearrangements, a requirement that is at odds with the very low membrane extensibility/compressibility given by its high stretching elastic modulus1,2. Other than simple extension and compression, the regulation of membrane area and shape therefore requires additional mechanisms, which could include active cell processes like endocytosis and exocytosis35 or the formation and attening of membrane invaginations/evaginations, either at the micron scale as in membrane folds6,7, blebs8 or vacuole-like dilations (VLDs)9 or at the nanoscale as in caveolae10. However and despite extensive work on membrane mechanical interactions1115, there is no clear physical understanding of the manner in which the cell membrane responds to changes in area and shape while remaining highly conned by adjacent cells or substrates.
Here we show that in response to changes in the area and volume of adherent cells, membrane remodelling occurs through a mechanical process that is passive, local, almost instantaneous and before any active response. This process generates invaginations with shapes that minimize the elastic and adhesive energy required to store both membrane area and liquid volume at the cellsubstrate interface. Once formed, cells reabsorb the invagi-nations through an active process with duration of the order of minutes.
ResultsMembrane response to changes in area and shape. To understand how cell membranes respond to changes in area and shape, we labelled the membrane of mouse embryonic broblasts (MEFs) by transfection with a membrane uorescent marker (pEYFP-mem) and seeded them on bronectin-coated poly (dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) membranes. We observed membrane dynamics after modifying two different cell shape parameters: cell volume (regulated through changes in medium osmolarity) and cell spreading area (regulated through a custom-built biaxial stretch device, Supplementary Fig. 1). After submitting cells to 6% linear strain (corresponding to a 12% increase in surface), we noted that additional required area was obtained by attening membrane rufes (Fig. 1a and Supplementary Movie 1). If stretch magnitude was increased, however, the membrane reservoir was depleted and the membrane teared within 3 min of constant stretch application (Fig. 1a,e and Supplementary Movie 1). In contrast, exposure to medium with a 50% reduction in osmolarity for 3 min increased cell volume by 20%, but only required an increase in plasma membrane area of 2% (Fig. 1c,d). By itself, this small increase in required area had a negligible effect on the membrane, as checked after stretching cells by 2% (Supplementary Fig. 2). Accordingly, 50% hypo-osmotic shock did not eliminate rufes (Fig. 1b and Supplementary Movie 2), and exposure to 100% deionized water was required to eliminate membrane rufes through cell swelling, or to lyse the membrane (Fig. 1b,f and Supplementary Movie 2).
After 3 min of stretch application, the release of stretch resulted in the accumulation of excess membrane in small membrane reservoirs of 0.51 mm in diameter (Fig. 2ik), which extended from both the cell ventral and dorsal surfaces (Fig. 2a,c and Supplementary Movie 3). Through pEYFP-mem uorescence quantication, we calculated that these reservoirs stored approximately 15% of the total projected cellsubstrate membrane area (see methods), roughly matching the 12% change in area associated with 6% linear biaxial strain. Reservoirs were resorbed
and eliminated by cells within B2 min (Fig. 2b), although their formation/resorption dynamics depended on temperature and stretch magnitude (see Supplementary Note 1 and Supplementary Fig. 3). Further, reservoirs appeared in open spaces devoid of actin bres and focal adhesions, suggesting that membrane invaginations avoided cytoskeletal resistance (Fig. 2d).
Similarly, re-application of isotonic medium after 3 min of exposure to 50% hypo-osmotic medium resulted in the formation of membrane invaginations in the cell ventral surface, which were however larger (B2 mm in diameter) and with a spherical cap shape (Fig. 2e,g and Supplementary Movie 3). The invaginations were quantied to store B2% of projected cellsubstrate membrane area, thereby also matching the associated membrane requirement imposed by the osmotic shock (Fig. 1d). Those invaginations were also eliminated by cells within B3 min (Fig. 2f), and their formation/resorption dynamics depended on temperature and magnitude of hypo-osmotic shock (see Supplementary Note 1 and Supplementary Fig. 3). The membrane structures were concentrated at the central part of the cell, with a less dense actin meshwork and less focal adhesions, and their formation had to displace actin bres and disrupt adhesions (Fig. 2h). This suggests that osmotically induced invaginations avoided sites of high cytoskeletal resistance like stretch-induced reservoirs, but due to their larger size also had to generate an opening through the cytoskeleton. The dynamic formation of those openings was conrmed by time-lapse images of cells co-transfected with both membrane and actin markers (Supplementary Fig. 4). The formation of such structures (termed VLDs) upon increases in medium osmolarity has long been described in neurons and other cell types9,16, and has been hypothesized to constitute a mechanism to accommodate excess membrane area upon osmotic-induced cell shrinking. However, 3-min incubation with 50% hypo-osmotic medium only imposed a 2% increase in membrane area (Fig. 1d), which by itself had negligible effects on the membrane (Supplementary Fig. 2). Thus, other factors beyond regulation of membrane area may drive VLD formation.
VLD formation is driven by water connement. Alternatively to being regulated by membrane area, VLDs formed after increasing osmolarity could be caused by water ows exiting cells, which would be conned between cells and the substrate and thereby generate hydrostatic pressure. To test this, we seeded cells on polyacrylamide gels, through which water can ow. In those conditions, VLDs did not form upon the change from hypo- to iso-osmotic medium (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Movie 4). This effect was due to the water-permeable properties of polyacrylamide and not by its lower stiffness, as VLDs clearly formed in softer but hydrophobic silicone elastomers (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Movie 4). Interestingly, application of stretch for 3 min and subsequent release in cells seeded on polyacrylamide gels resulted in the formation not only of reservoirs as expected, but also of VLDs (Fig. 3b and Supplementary Movie 5). This was due to the poroelastic properties of polyacrylamide gels17, by which gels gradually swelled when stretched for 3 min, and then gradually released water and shrank upon stretch release (Supplementary Fig. 5). Conrming this, reservoirs but not VLDs formed on both soft silicone elastomers and polyacrylamide gels where swelling was prevented by submitting them to stretch only during a short pulse (Fig. 3c). Thus, water pressure formed either through connement or poroelastic ows was equivalently successful at generating VLDs.
We then evaluated further the degree of water connement at the cellsubstrate interface by submitting cells to a 3-min 50% hypo-osmotic shock, and then restoring iso-osmotic medium
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Figure 1 | Membrane response to stretch and osmotic changes. (a) Cells transfected with pEYFP-mem before (top panel) and after (middle and bottom panels) applying different magnitudes of constant stretch. Yellow arrow indicates a membrane rufe attened by stretch. (b) Cells transfected with pEYFP-mem before and after reducing medium osmolarity to either 50 or 0% of original medium. Cells submitted to 0% osmolarity (de-ionized water) for 3 min sometimes rounded and attened membrane rufes (middle panel) and sometimes underwent membrane lysis (right panel). Yellow arrows indicate membrane rufes, which either remain or atten after applying 50 or 0% hypo-osmotic medium, respectively. (c) Confocal slice showing a cell before (green) and after (red) application of medium with 50% osmolarity for 3 min. (d) Corresponding quantication of the increase in cell volume and required membrane area (n 5 cells). (e) % of cells showing membrane tearing after 3 min of constant stretch application (n 70 cells). (f) % of cells showing
membrane lysis after 3 min of application of medium with different osmolarity (n 50 cells). Scale bars, 20 mm. Error bars are means.e.m.
labelled with membrane-impermeable red uorescent dextran. We did this at a low temperature of 26 C, which slowed VLD formation and allowed us to distinguish the formation and resorption phases of VLD dynamics (see Supplementary Note 1). Whereas the medium surrounding cells immediately became uorescent, the dextran-free water expelled by cells formed VLDs that had initially a very low uorescence in the red channel (Fig. 3d,e). This shows that medium in VLDs was indeed conned, and did not immediately mix with external medium. However, as time progressed VLDs gradually increased their uorescence even after VLDs started decreasing in size (Fig. 3e), demonstrating that water ow and mixing was impaired but not eliminated. Thus, the water pressure driving VLD formation was not caused by a complete seal, but by a transient and dynamic connement generated by friction and ow restriction at the cellsubstrate interface. Consistently, cells submitted to a gradual rather than sudden osmolarity increase had sufcient time to evacuate expelled water, preventing VLD formation (Fig. 4b). Interestingly, gradual rather than abrupt de-stretch also reduced reservoir formation, leading instead to membrane accumulations at the cell edge (Fig. 4a). This suggests that cells subjected to slow deformations can release membrane excess at locations where the membrane is not conned by a substrate, such as the cell edge. However, the increase in friction caused by fast de-stretch would prevent such long-scale rearrangements, forcing the membrane to release tension locally in reservoirs at the cellsubstrate interface.
Mechanism of membrane mechanical adaptation. In summary, reservoirs or VLDs were formed locally by mechanical stimuli
imposing, respectively, a change in area (through stretch) or volume stored at the cellsubstrate interface (through osmotic shocks or poroelastic ows, see Supplementary Note 2). We then evaluated different potential mechanisms to explain how those mechanical stimuli led to the formation of membrane structures. First, reservoirs and VLDs could be mediated by caveolae attening, reported to occur in response to both stretch and hypo-osmotic shocks10. However, neither reservoirs nor VLDs co-localized with caveolin during our experiments, and both types of membrane structures still formed and resorbed in caveolin 1 knockout cells (Supplementary Fig. 6). Further, reservoirs and VLDs formed and resorbed equally in caveolin 1 knockout cells reconstituted either with caveolin 1-GFP or with an empty vector (Supplementary Fig. 6). Second, the membrane could adapt through any of the active ATP-dependent remodelling processes (such as exo- or endocytosis) regulating its area and shape35. However, whereas ATP depletion inhibited reservoir and VLD resorption, it did not affect their formation (Fig. 5a,e and Supplementary Movie 6). ATP depletion also inhibited the dynamic reservoir rearrangements that occurred during their resorption by cells (Supplementary Movie 6), showing that reservoir resorption but not formation is mediated by an ATP-dependent process. Similarly, actin cytoskeleton depolymerization with cytochalasin D or a reduction in temperature slowed the resorption of both reservoirs and VLDs, but did not prevent their formation (Supplementary Fig. 7). In addition, both reservoirs and VLDs were consistently observed across different cell types from diverse species (Supplementary Fig. 8). Thus, whereas both reservoirs and VLDs resorbed through an active actin- and temperature-dependent response, they formed by a general
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8292
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Figure 2 | Cell membranes use different strategies to readapt to normal surface and volume. (a) pEYFP-mem-transfected cells before, during and after constant stretch application during 3 min. (b) Quantication of reservoir uorescence after stretch release (1: initial uorescence, 0: background). n 100
reservoirs from 10 cells. (c) Confocal vertical slice from a pEYFP-mem-transfected cell before (top) and after (bottom) application of 6% stretch for 3 min. (d) Staining images of cells xed immediately after stretch release showing the membrane (pEYFP-mem transfection), paxillin and actin. Merged co-localization images are shown to the right. (e) pEYFP-mem-transfected cells before, during and after application of 50% hypo-osmotic medium during 3 min. (f) Quantication of VLD uorescence after re-application of iso-osmotic medium (1: initial uorescence, 0: background). n 100 VLDs from 10
cells. (g) Confocal images of a pEYFP-mem-transfected cell before (top) and after (bottom) application of 50% hypo-osmotic medium for 3 min. (h) Staining images of cells xed immediately after re-application of iso-osmotic medium showing the membrane (pEYFP-mem transfection), paxillin and actin. Merged co-localization images are shown to the right. (i) Quantication of mean diameter of structures formed after stretch release (reservoirs) and re-application of iso-osmotic medium (VLDs). n 250/100 structures from 8/10 cells. (j) Quantication of mean density of structures formed after stretch
release (reservoirs) and re-application of iso-osmotic medium (VLDs). n 30/50 regions from 5/8 cells. (k) Quantication of mean height of structures
formed after stretch release (reservoirs) and re-application of iso-osmotic medium (VLDs). n 80/50 structures from 6/4 cells (***Po0.001, two-tailed
Students t-test). We note that reservoir heights are close to the axial resolution of our confocal microscope (0.9 mm) and thus represent upper estimates rather than accurate measurements. Scale bars are 5 mm in c,g and 20 mm in d,h. In all cases, zoomed insets (10 6 mm2 in c,g and 10 10 mm2 in d,h)
show a magnication of the area marked in the main image. Error bars are means.e.m.
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Figure 3 | VLD formation is driven by the connement of liquid ows at the cellsubstrate interface. Response of pEYFP-mem-transfected cells seeded on either poly-acrylamide (PA) gels or soft silicone elastomers to: (a) the application of 50% hypo-osmotic medium for 3 min, (b) the application of 6% strain for 3 min and (c) a fast 6% strain pulse. Insets show zoomed views (10x10 mm2) of membrane structures. Scale bars, 20 mm. No signicant differences were observed between any of the cases either in the diameter of reservoirs (n 150 reservoirs from 3 cells) or in their density (n 30 cell
regions from 3 cells). (d) Time sequence of VLD formation and resorption in pEYFP-mem-transfected cells exposed to dextran-labelled iso-osmotic media after 3 min incubation with 50% unlabelled hypo-osmotic media. (e) Zoomed insets (20 20 mm2) corresponding to red square in d showing the evolution
of membrane and dextran uorescence, and merged images. (f) Corresponding quantication of pEYFP-mem and dextran relative uorescence levels.
passive mechanical process. Further conrming the passive nature of reservoirs, their resorption in ATP-depleted cells could be induced by re-applying mechanical stretch (Fig. 5a,b and Supplementary Movie 6). Interestingly, whereas VLDs in ATP-depleted cells did not resorb, they gradually collapsed as water leaked from them (Fig. 5e,f and Supplementary Movie 7), leaving membrane accumulations similar to reservoirs. Those accumulations did not disappear upon re-application of hypo-osmotic medium, conrming (as observed in cells plated on polyacrylamide gels) that osmotic changes per se do not directly regulate membrane invaginations.
Thus, the two types of membrane invaginations could apparently convert to each other, pointing at a unied framework of membrane mechanical adaptation. Given its passive nature, this framework could potentially mimic the behaviour of synthetic cell-free membrane systems. To explore this hypothesis, we adapted a theoretical approach (see Supplementary Note 3) previously shown to reproduce the behaviour of passive synthetic bilayer membranes adhered to a deformable substrate18. In this approach, membrane invaginations are understood as structures that store excess membrane area or interstitial volume with the least energy penalty. The energy sources considered are the elastic strain energy required to stretch and bend the membrane, and the adhesion energy required to detach the membrane from the
substrate. This adhesion energy includes nonspecic interactions (as in the case of synthetic bilayers), but also specic bonds to the extracellular matrix mediated for instance by integrins. In the case of dorsal reservoirs substrate adhesion would not apply, but certain adhesion energy would still be required to detach the membrane from the underlying actin cortex. In this system, introducing liquid at the membranesubstrate interface results in the formation of VLD-like shallow spherical cap invaginations, which optimally store volume. In contrast, compressing the membrane results in the formation of tubular invaginations (with much higher surface/volume ratio), which optimally store excess membrane area. As surface/volume requirements increase, the model provides a phase diagram with increasingly large shallow caps to store volume, increasingly long tubules to store surface, and spherical invaginations with a small connecting neck to store both (Fig. 6a). If this framework applies to live cells, then the membrane reservoirs generated upon stretch release would in fact be short tubules, which should become longer for larger compressions. To test this, we seeded cells on pre-stretched membranes, and then further stretched the membrane. After 3 min, the total stretch (between 12 and 22%) was released, compressing the membrane. By using this two-step approach, we prevented the membrane tearing generally observed upon high stretch (Fig. 1). As expected, releasing stretch above 12% resulted
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6% Strain 6% Strain
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Figure 4 | Effect of stimulus application rate on membrane structure formation. (a) Cell submitted to two successive steps of 6% stretch for 3 min, in which the rst is released immediately and the second slowly (15 s). (b) Cell submitted to two successive applications of 50% hypo-osmotic media, in which iso-osmotic medium is restored rst immediately and then slowly (1 min). Scale bars, 20 mm. Insets show zoomed views (10 10 mm2) of
membrane structures.
in the formation of tubules, which became longer as stretch increased (Fig. 6b and Supplementary Movie 8). In some cases, tubules were observed to dynamically grow from reservoirs, showing that indeed reservoirs correspond to nascent membrane tubules (Supplementary Movie 8). Also as predicted by the model, VLD size, and therefore contained volume, increased with the magnitude of the hypo-osmotic shock (Fig. 6c).
We then explored more complex membrane deformation pathways within the phase diagram (Fig. 7ad). First, we generated VLDs in cells by decreasing and then restoring osmolarity, and then quickly re-applied hypo-osmotic medium. Cells quickly swelled and re-absorbed water in VLDs, leading to their immediate collapse (Fig. 7e) and conrming that hydrostatic pressure is key to their formation and maintenance (see Supplementary Note 2). However, mere removal of hydrostatic pressure was not sufcient to resorb membrane recruited upon VLD formation. As in ATP-depleted cells (Fig. 5e-f), bright membrane accumulations (collapsed VLDs akin to reservoirs) remained at VLD sites (Fig. 7e). Subsequent application of stretch could then eliminate collapsed VLDs, closing the path in the phase diagram (Fig. 7a). In contrast, full non-collapsed VLDs were maintained by hydrostatic pressure and only increased in diameter upon stretch (Fig. 7f,i). Next, we submitted cells to both hypo-osmotic shock and stretch for 3 min and rst restored iso-osmotic medium, leading to VLD formation as expected (Fig. 7g). Upon stretch release, excess membrane did not form reservoirs or tubules but rather accumulated at the site of VLDs, as indicated by a sharp increase in pEYFP-mem uorescence (Fig. 7k). Confocal sections showed that VLDs became taller and more invaginated (Fig. 7j), in agreement with the structures predicted by the model to store both volume and membrane area (Fig. 7c). This latter nding highlights that pre-existing membrane invaginations (which are already bent and detached from the substrate) act as seeds for further membrane storage. To conrm this, we submitted cells to both stretch and hypo-osmotic medium and rst released stretch, which resulted in reservoir formation (Fig. 7h). When we then restored iso-osmotic medium, VLDs indeed formed at the seed sites where reservoirs were previously located (Fig. 7l). As VLD formation was now dictated
by the denser reservoir network, VLDs appeared in higher number and smaller size than those formed either in the absence of stretch or before stretch release (Fig. 7m).
Finally, we evaluated the effect of modifying one of the key parameters of the system, adhesion energy. To this end, we treated cells with a blocking antibody against a5b1 integrin, which we previously identied to provide adhesion strength to bronectin-coated substrates in the same cell type19. Decreasing adhesion strength reduced the density of stretch-mediated reservoirs (Supplementary Fig. 9). Similar to the case of slow stretch release (Fig. 4), this suggests that reduced friction and interaction at the membranesubstrate interface allowed cells to release excess membrane in more distant but less conned membrane regions. In contrast, VLDs in cells with reduced adhesion slightly increased in density, and markedly increased in diameter (Supplementary Fig. 9). This is consistent with model predictions, as a reduction in adhesion would make it energetically favourable to detach a larger membrane area to generate each VLD. Inhibition of a5b1 also slowed VLD resorption, demonstrating that cells had an impaired ability to re-adhere detached membrane areas. In conclusion, the phase diagram provided by passive minimization of elastic and adhesive energies consistently predicted how the different perturbations generated membrane structures. The approximate dimensions of those structures, and their relative variations, were also correctly predicted after assuming parameter values consistent with experimental conditions (see Supplementary Note 3).
DiscussionDespite extensive work, the mechanisms of membrane adaptation to physical constraints have remained elusive. It was recently shown that membrane area can be stored or released upon mechanical stimulation through the assembly/disassembly of caveolae10. However, the estimated 0.3% of membrane area contained in caveolae contrasts with membrane requirements of up to 10% for instance in spreading cells7, suggesting that additional buffers are required. Such buffers can be provided in time scales from seconds to minutes by active exocytic/endocytic
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Figure 5 | Membrane mechanical adaptation is a passive process followed by active recovery. (a) Examples of control and ATP-depleted pEYFP-memtransfected cells before, during and after application of two 3-min constant stretch pulses. (b) Quantication of reservoir uorescence after release of rst stretch pulse and during application and release of the second pulse (n 50/70 reservoirs from 5/5 cells). The effect of ATP depletion was signicant
(Po0.001). (c) Quantication of reservoir size in control and ATP-depleted cells (n 150/200 reservoirs from 3/4 cells). No signicant differences were
observed, two-tailed Students t-test. (d) Quantication of reservoir density in control and ATP-depleted cells (n 50/50 regions from 5/5 cells).
No signicant differences were observed. (e) Examples of control and ATP-depleted pEYFP-mem-transfected cells before, during and after application of 50% hypo-osmotic medium in two 3-min pulses. (f) Quantication of VLD uorescence after the rst re-application of iso-osmotic medium and during application and release of the second pulse (n 35/40 VLDs from 3/3 cells). The effect of ATP depletion was signicant (Po0.001, two-tailed Students
t-test). (g) Quantication of VLD size in control and ATP-depleted cells (n 30/35 VLDs from 3/3 cells). No signicant differences were observed.
(h) Quantication of VLD density in control and ATP-depleted cells (n 20/25 regions from 3/3 cells). No signicant differences were observed.
Scale bars, 20 mm. Insets show zoomed views (10 10 mm2) of membrane structures.
processes35, which protect membrane integrity for instance in alveolar lung epithelial cells in response to both stretch20 and osmotic changes21. Here we show that, before the onset of any such active process, membranes adapt almost instantaneously through a passive process minimizing membrane elastic and adhesion energies, akin to what is observed in synthetic lipid membranes18,22. This process leads to the nucleation and growth of reservoirs/tubules to accommodate membrane area fractions that can be above 10%. The analogy between cell membranes and synthetic bilayers is surprising and has striking implications. First and addressing an unresolved issue2, our results suggest that if the perturbation is fast enough, membrane tension is released locally and not instantaneously transmitted across the cell (Fig. 4). The shape and size of membrane structures thus depends on both the magnitude and the dynamics of applied perturbations, which could lead for instance to the travelling membrane/cortex waves observed in cell-free surfaces23. Second and despite the complex
molecular composition, cytoskeletal attachment and active behaviour of cell membranes24, we show that their mechanical adaptation can be successfully modelled by simply considering the two lipid layers. This is because the main mechanical parameter that constrains membrane deformation is the stretching modulus, which is determined by the membrane itself and not by the underlying actin cortex (see Supplementary Note 3). Finally, we note that reservoirs can store and release membrane area upon subsequent stretch cycles (Fig. 5), providing a regulatory mechanism potentially applicable to mechanical processes with time scales below the B2 min required for active membrane resorption (such as breathing, heart beating or muscle contraction).
Our results also demonstrate that VLDs, which were broadly understood as membrane area containers4,9,25, are driven instead by hydrostatic pressure from water stored at the cellsubstrate interface. Their role in processes such as cell adaptation to
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Figure 6 | Membrane mechanical adaptation is explained by minimization of the strain and adhesion energies required to generate surface and volume containers. (a) Phase diagram showing the predicted structures that require minimal energy to deform the membrane and detach it from the substrate in order to accommodate membrane surface area (upon stretch release) and liquid volume at the cellsubstrate interface (upon an increase in osmolarity)18. Surface storage is achieved optimally with increasingly long tubules, whereas volume storage leads to the formation of spherical caps (VLDs). When both volume and surface storage are required, spherical caps bud and become more invaginated. (b) Left: time-course sequences of cell membrane regions showing the formation of either reservoirs or increasingly long tubules after releasing different stretch magnitudes. Right: Mean reservoir/tubule length (black dots, experimental data, red line, theoretical prediction) as a function of de-stretch magnitude (for increasing stretch,n 80/50/50 structures from 6/3/3 cells). (c) Left: images showing the formation of increasingly large VLDs after restoring iso-osmotic medium in
cells previously exposed to different magnitudes of hypo-osmotic shocks for 3 min. Right: mean VLD diameter (black dots, experimental data, red line, theoretical prediction) as a function of hypo-osmotic shock magnitude (for increasing osmotic shock, 60/100/100/50 structures from 5/5/10/3 cells). Scale bars, 5 mm. Error bars are means.e.m.
shrinking should therefore be revisited, as cells in most physiological settings will be surrounded by permeable extracellular matrices, which would not constrain water ow from cells. However, we show that VLDs can be equivalently formed by hydrostatic pressure arising from other sources (such as poroelastic ows, Fig. 3b), suggesting a signicant role in the cellular adaptation to any excess water pressure at the cellmatrix interface. The fact that increasing osmolarity leads to the immediate formation of VLDs rather than merely expelling water through the dorsal surface also conrms that the cytoplasm exhibits limited water mobility and slow pressure redistribution26. Both reservoirs/tubules and VLDs form at sites of low cytoskeletal density and resorb through an actin- and ATP-dependent process. This active cell response likely involves actin polymerization to push the lamellipodium and re-stretch and atten the cell membrane, endocytic processes to detach invaginated reservoirs or tubules, or vesiculation, that is, the detachment of membrane vesicles from tubules that has been observed both in live cells27 and in passive bilayer systems18. However and regardless of the specic active mechanisms by which cells re-absorb membrane structures, the physical principles that drive their formation may themselves be harnessed by cells to respond to changes in cell shape arising in any instance of cell migration or deformation. Further, the biochemical activity of membrane curvature-sensitive molecules2,28,29 could also be affected by the local curvature induced by tubules or VLDs, potentially initiating mechanotransduction cascades.
Methods
Cell culture and reagents. MEFs were previously described19,30 and cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS). One day before experiments, cells were transfected with the membrane-targeting plasmid pEYFP-mem (Clontech) or lifeact-ruby using the Neon transfection device according to the manufacturers instructions (Invitrogen). pEYFP-mem contains the N-terminal 20 amino acids of neuromodulin, which is palmytoylated post-translationally and targets the EYFP uorophore to membranes. Cells were incubated with cytochalasin D for 30 min to depolymerize the actin cytoskeleton(0.5 mM, Sigma) and with 10 mM deoxy-D-glucose plus 10 mM NaN3 (Sigma) to deplete ATP levels. Dextran experiments were carried out with 0.5 mg ml 1 of tetramethylrhodamine-labelled dextran (10,000 MW, Life technologies), and a5b1 integrins were blocked with 10 mg ml 1 a5b1 antibody (Merck Millipore, clone
BMB5). The role of caveolin 1 was analysed by using Caveolin1 Knock out MEFs reconstituted with Cav1 or IRES-GFP as a control31. Cav1 was cloned in the lentiviral vector pRR SIN 18 CMV IRES EGFP. To generate these stable cell lines, the infected cells were selected by sorting for GFP marker expression by ow cytometry (FACS). Cav1 expression was checked by western blot analysis and reverse transcriptionquantitative PCR. Cells expressing levels of Cav1-GFP comparable to endogenous Cav1 levels in wild-type MEFs were selected for experiments. Chinese Hamster Ovary cells were cultured in HF-12 medium supplemented with 10% FBS. Human keratinocytes (HaCaT) were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS. Human squamous carcinoma cells (A431) were cultured in Earles Balanced Salt Solution supplemented with 10% FBS.
Preparation of stretchable membranes. The stretchable PDMS membranes (see schematic in Supplementary Fig. 1) were prepared by mixing the PDMS base and crosslinker at a 10:1 ratio, degassing for 1 h, spinning the mixture on a 13-cm sheet (500 r.p.m., 1 min) and curing at 65 C overnight. Once cured, PDMS membranes were peeled off and placed tightly between the rings of the stretching device (Supplementary Fig. 1). Membranes were then coated with 10 mg ml 1 bronectin (Sigma) overnight at 4 C, or attached to either polyacrylamide or soft silicone elastomers. To attach polyacrylamide gels to membranes32, gels were prepared by using a mixture of 10% acrylamide and 0.3% bis-acrylamide and polymerizing between two coverslips treated with repel-silane (Youngs modulus B30 kPa).
Once polymerized, one coverslip was removed and the gel was pressed in contact with the PDMS membrane, which had previously been treated with 3-aminopropyl triethoxysilane 10% in ethanol for 1 h at 65 C and with glutaraldehyde (1,5%) in PBS for 25 m at room temperature. After overnight incubation at 37 C in a humid chamber for covalent binding, the other coverslip was removed and the gel was incubated with 10 mg ml 1 bronectin overnight at 4 C, resulting in membrane-attached gels ready for cell culture. Soft silicon elastomers (CY 52276, Dow
Corning, with Youngs modulus B8 kPa (ref. 33)) were prepared by mixing CyA and CyB components at a 1:1 ratio and curing at 80 C for 2 h (ref. 33). The substrates were then attached to membranes following the same procedure as for polyacrylamide gels. In some experiments not involving stretch, PDMS membranes were cured directly on glass coverslips instead of placing them in the stretch system.
Stretch and osmolarity experiments. Once PDMS membranes were either directly coated with bronectin or covalently attached to bronectin-coated polyacrylamide/soft silicone gels, cells were seeded on the membrane and allowed to spread in the incubator for 0.5 h. Then, membranes were placed on the stretch system (Supplementary Fig. 1), consisting of a central loading post and an external ring. Vacuum was then applied through the space between the loading post and the external ring, thereby deforming and stretching the membrane. Cells spread on the membrane directly on top of the central loading post experienced an equibiaxial strain which depended on the vacuum pressure applied (Supplementary Fig. 1). The system was then mounted on the microscope stage. To modify osmolarity, cells were exposed to medium mixed with de-ionized water in which the concentrations of Ca2 and Mg2 had been corrected.
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Figure 7 | Membrane remodelling can be described through pathways along the surface/volume phase diagram. (ad) Different pathways testedin the phase diagram by applying stretch and hypo-osmotic shocks (red arrows, numbers refer to the corresponding image in the panel below).(eh) Corresponding response of pEYFP-mem-transfected cells after applying stretch and osmotic shocks as indicated to follow the pathways. Time ows from top to bottom. In all cases, the rst application of stretch/hypo-osmotic shock (second row of cells) lasted 3 min. Subsequent steps were carried out as quickly as possible to evaluate membrane response before cells had time to actively eliminate structures. (i) In cells submitted to hypo-osmotic shock, co-localization of membrane structures formed after rst restoring iso-osmotic medium (red) and then applying stretch (green). (j) Confocal vertical slices showing VLD shape before (top) and after (bottom) stretch release. Zoomed image to the right shows the superimposed shape prediction from the theoretical model in red. (k) Quantication of VLD uorescence for cells under hypo-osmotic medium after either restoring iso-osmotic medium(blue symbols) or restoring iso-osmotic medium and then releasing stretch application (pink symbols, arrow indicates moment of stretch release).
N 100/50 structures from 10/5 cells. (l) In cells submitted to both hypo-osmotic shock and stretch, co-localization of membrane structures formed after
rst releasing stretch (red) and then restoring iso-osmotic medium (green). (m) Quantication of VLD diameter (n 100/50/70 structures from 10/3/3
cells, ***Po0.001, analysis of variance (ANOVA)) and density (n 50/30/30 regions from 8/3/3 cells, ***Po0.001, ANOVA) in cells submitted only to
osmotic shocks or also to de-stretch (stretch release) before or after restoring iso-osmolarity). Scale bars are 5 mm in j and 20 mm elsewhere. Insets show zoomed views (10 10 mm2) of membrane structures. Error bars are means.e.m.
Imaging. Cell images of uorescently labelled cells were obtained using an upright microscope (Nikon eclipse Ni-U) with a water immersion objective( 60 magnication, NA 1.0) and an Orca Flash 4.0 camera (Hamamatsu).
To obtain three-dimensional stacks, an inverted microscope (Nikon Eclipse Ti) with a spinning disk confocal unit (CSU-W1, Yokogawa), a Zyla sCMOS camera (Andor) and a 60 objective was used. This objective was either of oil immersion
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(NA 1.42) or of water immersion (NA 1.0) for experiments involving stretch,
as viscous oil droplets dragged the exible PDMS membrane used for stretch and precluded proper focusing.
Analysis of membrane structures. The evolution of membrane structures (reservoirs and VLDs) was analysed by measuring the time course of the pEYFP-mem uorescence of each structure. To correct for photobleaching, this uorescence was expressed as the fold-increase with respect to the background uorescence of neighbouring cell regions without membrane structures, and normalized between 1 (initial uorescence after stretch release or osmolarity increase) and 0 (background cell uorescence). The diameter and density of structures was also measured, and the height was obtained from confocal slices. We note, however, that reservoir heights are close to the axial resolution of our confocal microscope (0.9 mm) and thus represent upper estimates rather than accurate measurements. The membrane fraction contained in membrane structures was estimated by comparing the average pEYFP-mem uorescence of cell regions containing structures to the average uorescence of structure-free zones within the same region. To ensure that we only considered the uorescence of structures induced by stretch or osmotic shocks, the analysis was carried out in regions devoid of visible endomembrane structures before the application of stretch or osmotic shocks. In all time-lapse uorescence images shown in gures, contrast was adjusted in each image to correct for the effect of photobleaching and leave cell background at a uniform level. Supplementary Videos show the full time-lapse videos without this adjustment, thereby showing the effect of photobleaching. The videos also show a decrease in uorescence upon application/release of stretch, caused by added photobleaching during the re-centering and re-focusing of cells after their movement.
Cell volume and surface estimations. Changes in cell volume and required membrane surface were calculated from spinning disk confocal slices obtained in cells before and after a 3-min 50% hypo-osmotic treatment. Cells were rst re-sliced in the XZ plane (resulting in the images observed for instance in Fig. 2g), and membrane uorescence images were binarized by thresholding. Cell volume was then calculated by adding the total number of pixels inside cells from all slices and multiplying by voxel size. To measure membrane surface, the cell perimeter in XZ-plane confocal slices was drawn manually. This avoided spurious increasesin the estimated cell perimeter caused by the jagged cell edge resulting from binarization. We note that our area estimates do not correspond to the total membrane area, which may contain small folds not resolved by microscope images. Rather, our measurements estimate the increase in membrane area required to accommodate the global change in shape produced by cell swelling.
Immunostaining. For uorescence staining, cells were xed with 4% paraformaldehyde, permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 and labelled rst with primary antibodies (2 h, room temperature), and then with Alexa-conjugated secondary antibodies (Invitrogen, 2 h, room temperature). Primary antibodies used were against paxillin (2 mg ml 1, clone 349 produced in mouse, ref. 610051 from BD Transduction Laboratories) and Caveolin 1 (4 mg ml 1, CAV1, polyclonal antibody produced in rabbit, ref. 610060 from BD Transduction Laboratories).
Phalloidin-Tetramethylrhodamine B isothiocyanate (Sigma) was used instead of primary antibodies to label actin.
Modelling. Theoretical modelling was carried out using a previously described approach18. Model assumptions, parameters and predictions are described in Supplementary Note 3.
Stastistical analysis. Statistical comparisons were carried out with two-tailed Students t-tests when two cases were compared and with analysis of variance tests when more cases were analysed. All data are shown as means.e.m.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge support from the Spanish Ministry for Economy and Competitiveness (BFU2011-23111, BFU2012-38146, and FIS-PI11-00089), a Career Integration Grant within the seventh European Community Framework Programme (PCIG10-GA-2011-303848), the European Research Council (Grant Agreements 242993, 240487 and 240487), the Generalitat de Catalunya, Fundaci La Caixa, Fundaci la Marat de TV3 (project 20133330) and the Mechanobiology Institute Singapore grant, initiative of the the National Research Foundation of Singapore (to N.C.G). We thank F. Lolo and the members of the X.T. and P.R-C. laboratories for technical assistance and discussions.
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Author contributions
A.J.K., M.A., N.C.G. and P.R.-C. conceived the study, A.J.K., S.M., M.A., X.T., N.C.G. and P.R.-C. designed the experiments, A.J.K. and J.J.T. performed the experiments, A.E.-A, R.M.-V. and M.A.delP. contributed new reagents/analytical tools, A.J.K., L.C., V.G.-T., D.N. and X.T developed the stretch device, M.A. carried out the theoretical modelling, and A.J.K., M.A., and P.R.-C. wrote the paper.
Additional information
Supplementary Information accompanies this paper at http://www.nature.com/ naturecommunications
Competing nancial interests: The authors declare no competing nancial interests.
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How to cite this article: Kosmalska, AJ. et al. Physical principles of membrane remodelling during cell mechanoadaptation. Nat. Commun. 6:7292doi: 10.1038/ncomms8292 (2015).
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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jun 2015
Abstract
Biological processes in any physiological environment involve changes in cell shape, which must be accommodated by their physical envelope--the bilayer membrane. However, the fundamental biophysical principles by which the cell membrane allows for and responds to shape changes remain unclear. Here we show that the 3D remodelling of the membrane in response to a broad diversity of physiological perturbations can be explained by a purely mechanical process. This process is passive, local, almost instantaneous, before any active remodelling and generates different types of membrane invaginations that can repeatedly store and release large fractions of the cell membrane. We further demonstrate that the shape of those invaginations is determined by the minimum elastic and adhesive energy required to store both membrane area and liquid volume at the cell-substrate interface. Once formed, cells reabsorb the invaginations through an active process with duration of the order of minutes.
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