(352h) Coarse-Grained Modeling of Molecular Release from an Actin Network | AIChE

(352h) Coarse-Grained Modeling of Molecular Release from an Actin Network

Authors 

Kang, J. - Presenter, Carnegie Mellon University
Puskar, K. M., Point Park University
Schwartz, R. S., Carnegie Mellon University
LeDuc, P. R., Carnegie Mellon University


Recent literature provides strong evidence for a causative link between the mechanical stretching of cytoskeleton and the release of signaling molecules [1].  Understanding the link between the mechanical input, the corresponding morphological changes in the actin cytoskeleton, and the final signaling molecule release is a poorly understood yet very significant problem in the field of mechanotransduction. Here, we present a coarse-grained actin network model that simulates architectural changes in the network in response to external mechanical stimulus to understand the interplay between actin network mechanics and resulting biochemical signaling.  We develop a coarse-grained actin network model and examine the intrinsic angle geometry changes under mechanical stimulation. We have previously examined actin network mechanics with a derivative of this model [2].  The network is created with a circular solution space that is considered fixed to an underlying substrate at uniformly placed perimeter nodes representing focal adhesions.  Filaments are formed by crosslinking opposite focal adhesions on the periphery.  Intersections formed by crosslinking represent molecular linking of actin with affiliated attached molecules (e.g. filamin A and FilGAP) at each of the four angles created by that intersection.  Stretch is simulated by moving the upper nodes while holding the bottom nodes stationary and balancing forces on the remaining nodes.

As stretch is applied to the network, the intersecting angle distribution transitions from a more peaked to a flatter distribution while still being centered at 90º.  We also examined the difference in the stretched angle relative to the non-stretched angle (“delta angle”), and observe a shift in distribution as additional stretch is applied. At 1% stretch, the delta angles are small with almost no angle changes greater than 5 degrees, but at higher levels of stretch, the observed delta angle distribution is almost uniform.  These histograms reflect similar results to simulations performed by Ehrlicher et al. on their experiments even though their simulations had different overall morphologies and boundary conditions [1].

These results are being incorporated into molecular release models that represent a potentially versatile platform for examining the biophysical interactions that link mechanical stimulus at the cellular level to response at the protein level and may underlie strain-induced signaling mediated by the cytoskeleton.


References

  1. Ehrlicher et al. (2011) Mechanical strain in actin networks regulates FilGAP and integrin binding to filamin A. Nature 478, 260-261.

  2. Kang J et al. (2011) Response of an actin filament network model under cyclic stretching through a coarse grained Monte Carlo approach. J Theor Biol 274, 109-119.

See more of this Session: In Silico Systems Biology: Cellular and Organismal Models I

See more of this Group/Topical: Topical A: Systems Biology