Elliot Botvinick,

Find an error

Name: Botvinick,, Elliot
Organization: University of California, Irvine , USA
Department:
Title: Associate(PhD)
Co-reporter:M. Keating, A. Kurup, M. Alvarez-Elizondo, A.J. Levine, E. Botvinick
Acta Biomaterialia 2017 Volume 57(Volume 57) pp:
Publication Date(Web):15 July 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.actbio.2017.05.008
Bulk tissue stiffness has been correlated with regulation of cellular processes and conversely cells have been shown to remodel their pericellular tissue according to a complex feedback mechanism critical to development, homeostasis, and disease. However, bulk rheological methods mask the dynamics within a heterogeneous fibrous extracellular matrix (ECM) in the region proximal to a cell (pericellular region). Here, we use optical tweezers active microrheology (AMR) to probe the distribution of the complex material response function (α = α′ + α″, in units of µm/nN) within a type I collagen ECM, a biomaterial commonly used in tissue engineering. We discovered cells both elastically and plastically deformed the pericellular material. α′ is wildly heterogeneous, with 1/α′ values spanning three orders of magnitude around a single cell. This was observed in gels having a cell-free 1/α′ of approximately 0.5 nN/µm. We also found that inhibition of cell contractility instantaneously softens the pericellular space and reduces stiffness heterogeneity, suggesting the system was strain hardened and not only plastically remodeled. The remaining regions of high stiffness suggest cellular remodeling of the surrounding matrix. To test this hypothesis, cells were incubated within the type I collagen gel for 24-h in a media containing a broad-spectrum matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitor. While pericellular material maintained stiffness asymmetry, stiffness magnitudes were reduced. Dual inhibition demonstrates that the combination of MMP activity and contractility is necessary to establish the pericellular stiffness landscape. This heterogeneity in stiffness suggests the distribution of pericellular stiffness, and not bulk stiffness alone, must be considered in the study of cell-ECM interactions and design of complex biomaterial scaffolds.Statement of SignificanceCollagen is a fibrous extracellular matrix (ECM) protein widely used to study cell-ECM interactions. Stiffness of ECM has been shown to instruct cells, which can in turn modify their ECM, as has been shown in the study of cancer and regenerative medicine. Here we measure the stiffness of the collagen microenvironment surrounding cells and quantitatively measure the dependence of pericellular stiffness on MMP activity and cytoskeletal contractility. Competent cell-mediated stiffening results in a wildly heterogeneous micromechanical topography, with values spanning orders of magnitude around a single cell. We speculate studies must consider this notable heterogeneity generated by cells when testing theories regarding the role of ECM mechanics in health and disease.Download high-res image (192KB)Download full-size image
Co-reporter:Bhupinder Shergill, Laurence Meloty-Kapella, Abdiwahab A. Musse, Gerry Weinmaster, Elliot Botvinick
Developmental Cell (12 June 2012) Volume 22(Issue 6) pp:1313-1320
Publication Date(Web):12 June 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.devcel.2012.04.007
Notch signaling controls diverse cellular processes critical to development and disease. Cell surface ligands bind Notch on neighboring cells but require endocytosis to activate signaling. The role ligand endocytosis plays in Notch activation has not been established. Here we integrate optical tweezers with cell biological and biochemical methods to test the prevailing model that ligand endocytosis facilitates recycling to enhance ligand interactions with Notch necessary to trigger signaling. Specifically, single-molecule measurements indicate that interference of ligand endocytosis and/or recycling does not alter the force required to rupture bonds formed between cells expressing the Notch ligand Delta-like1 (Dll1) and laser-trapped Notch1 beads. Together, our analyses eliminate roles for ligand endocytosis and recycling in Dll1-Notch1 interactions and indicate that recycling indirectly affects signaling by regulating the accumulation of cell surface ligand. Importantly, our study demonstrates the utility of optical tweezers to test a role for ligand endocytosis in generating cell-mediated mechanical force.Video AbstractDownload video (15MB)Help with mp4 filesGraphical AbstractDownload high-res image (217KB)Download full-size imageHighlights► Optical tweezers measure single-molecule Notch (N1)-ligand (Dll1) bond strength ► Blockade of dynamin activity does not alter the strength of Dll1-N1 interactions ► Rab11-mediated Dll1 recycling does not alter single-molecule Dll1-N1 bond strength ► Dll1 recycling influences signal intensity by regulating ligand accumulation
Co-reporter:Laurence Meloty-Kapella, Bhupinder Shergill, Jane Kuon, Elliot Botvinick, Gerry Weinmaster
Developmental Cell (12 June 2012) Volume 22(Issue 6) pp:1299-1312
Publication Date(Web):12 June 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.devcel.2012.04.005
Notch signaling induced by cell surface ligands is critical to development and maintenance of many eukaryotic organisms. Notch and its ligands are integral membrane proteins that facilitate direct cell-cell interactions to activate Notch proteolysis and release the intracellular domain that directs Notch-specific cellular responses. Genetic studies suggest that Notch ligands require endocytosis, ubiquitylation, and epsin endocytic adaptors to activate signaling, but the exact role of ligand endocytosis remains unresolved. Here we characterize a molecularly distinct mode of clathrin-mediated endocytosis requiring ligand ubiquitylation, epsins, and actin for ligand cells to activate signaling in Notch cells. Using a cell-bead optical tweezers system, we obtained evidence for cell-mediated mechanical force dependent on this distinct mode of ligand endocytosis. We propose that the mechanical pulling force produced by endocytosis of Notch-bound ligand drives conformational changes in Notch that permit activating proteolysis.Video AbstractDownload video (15MB)Help with mp4 filesGraphical AbstractDownload high-res image (220KB)Download full-size imageHighlights► Distinct modes of ligand endocytosis for functional and biomechanical responses ► Dll1-epsin1 complex formation dependent on ligand ubiquitylation and epsin UIMs ► Optical tweezers detect Dll1 cell-mediated pulling force specific for Notch binding ► Dll1 cell-mediated pulling force specifically depends on dynamin, epsins, and actin
Mitogen-activated protein kinase p38
Matrigel
Heparin sodium
Butanoic acid, 2(or3)-methyl-,(2R,3S,6S,7R,8R)-3-[[3-(formylamino)-2-hydroxybenzoyl]amino]-8-hexyl-2,6-dimethyl-4,9-dioxo-1,5-dioxonan-7-ylester (9CI)
[(3-chlorophenyl)hydrazono]malononitrile
Adenosine5'-(trihydrogen diphosphate), P'®5'-ester with 1,4-dihydro-1-b-D-ribofuranosyl-3-pyridinecarboxamide
Cyclooxygenase 2