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First published online October 10, 2007
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.018473
Commentary |
Department of Biochemistry, School of Medical Sciences, University of Bristol, BS8 1TD, UK
e-mails: s.pellegrin{at}bristol.ac.uk; h.mellor{at}bristol.ac.uk
Accepted 21 August 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: Stress fibre, Stress fibre, Rho GTPase, Actin, Contractility, Cell migration, Myofibroblast, Myoepithelial
| Introduction |
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| Stress fibre structure |
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-actinin (Lazarides and Burridge, 1975
-actinin is periodic along the fibre (Fig. 1A) and alternates with bands containing non-muscle myosin (Weber and Groeschel-Stewart, 1974
-actinin, which would be analogous to the role of this actin-crosslinking protein at the Z-line of sarcomeres (Fig. 1B). These bands of
-actinin in stress fibres can been seen as electron-dense striations by electron microscopy, with myosin-rich regions appearing as interleaving electron-light regions (Langanger et al., 1984
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| Filament orientation |
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| Stress fibre assembly |
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The stress fibres observed in fibroblasts have been divided into three classes on the basis of their subcellular location: ventral stress fibres, dorsal stress fibres and transverse arcs (Small et al., 1998
). Ventral stress fibres are the most commonly observed structures (Fig. 1C) and lie along the base of the cell, attached to integrin-rich focal adhesions at each end (Burridge, 1986
). Dorsal stress fibres are attached to a focal adhesion at one end only, which tethers them to the base of the cell. The rest of the structures rises towards the dorsal surface, terminating in a loose matrix of actin filaments (Heath and Dunn, 1978
). Transverse arcs are bundles of actin that form beneath the dorsal surface of migrating cells, just behind the protrusive lamella. After forming, these structures sweep backwards towards the nucleus, where they disassemble (Heath, 1983
).
A beautiful and comprehensive study by Lappalainen and co-workers has shown that each type of stress fibre is assembled by a different mechanism (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006
). Imaging of stress fibre formation in living cells shows that dorsal stress fibres elongate from focal adhesions to form short filaments containing
-actinin (Fig. 1). Clusters of myosin are then woven into these structures, displacing
-actinin to give the classic periodic staining. In contrast to this, transverse arcs form by end-to-end joining of short bundles of actin to bundles of myosin – a sectional construction method (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006
; Zimerman et al., 2004
). It is important to note, however, that other studies support an alternative model for the construction of transverse arcs – where these structures form through the actions of myosin bundles on pre-existing networks of actin filaments. These studies show that aggregates of myosin form at the leading edge of the cell and then travel backwards through the lamella by retrograde flow, becoming associated with the loose network of actin filaments at the base of the protrusion. Detailed ultrastructural analysis of myosin and actin filaments in these cells supports a model in which the effects of myosin contraction on these networks causes their reorganisation into actin bundles into which
-actinin could then become inserted (Verkhovsky et al., 1995
; Verkhovsky et al., 1999
). Finally, ventral stress fibres, the most commonly observed structures, form by the end-to-end joining of two dorsal stress fibres to form a structure that is anchored at both ends by a focal adhesion (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006
). In some cases the two dorsal stress fibre ends find each other and join directly. In other cases they meet at a transverse arc, which then disassembles as the resulting stress fibre is pulled down to the base of the cell (Fig. 1D).
These three different classes of stress fibre, and their three different modes of formation, provide a potential explanation for the different filament polarities observed in ultrastructural analysis of stress fibres. Elongating dorsal stress fibres should have the uniform polarity seen in stress fibres in the lamellipodia (Cramer et al., 1997
; Svitkina et al., 1997
). The regular end-to-end joining of actin and myosin bundles seen in transverse arcs should give sarcomeric-like fibres similar to those seen directly below the plasma membrane in ultrastructural studies (Cramer et al., 1997
). We propose that the mechanism of formation of ventral stress fibres is consistent with the graded polarity seen in the majority of stress fibres observed in motile fibroblasts (Cramer et al., 1997
). The end-to-end joining of two dorsal stress fibres to give a ventral stress fibre should result initially in a structure that has symmetry of filament polarity across the axis of the join. As myosin drives invasion of filaments across this axis, the result should be the mixed/graded polarity observed in vivo (Fig. 1B).
So how might each type of stress fibre contract? Transverse arcs should contract like muscle sarcomeres; however, because these structures are not anchored to the plasma membrane by focal adhesions (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006
), it is unclear whether they have an attachment through which this force could be transmitted. The uniform polarity of dorsal stress fibres raises questions about whether these are contractile structures. For myosin to create tension by moving across a set of uniformly polarised filaments, it would have to be linked to a fixed object in the cell that would act as an anchor (Cramer et al., 1997
). At present it is unclear whether such anchors exist. One possible use for bundles that display uniform polarity could be myosin-based trafficking – either of vesicle cargoes or proteins – towards focal adhesions at the ventral cell surface (DePina and Langford, 1999
). Alternatively, these structures could help to provide rigidity to the cell or simply represent a transient stage in the formation of ventral stress fibres. Finally, ventral stress fibres should be contractile in their central region, where fibres from opposing ends would ratchet over each other, leading to tension across the structure. Because they are tethered at both ends by focal adhesions, this would allow the resultant force to be transmitted to the substratum. In keeping with this, analysis of the contractile forces generated in non-muscle cells shows that the majority of the contractile force that a fibroblast applies to the substrate is aligned with the direction of ventral stress fibres (Burridge, 1981
; Harris et al., 1980
).
Seemingly opposed to this last model are the results of recent studies by Burridge and co-workers, who measured ventral stress fibre contraction in non-motile cells. By examining the spacing between units of
-actinin in live cells as they contracted, they were able to show that contraction is greatest towards the periphery, and that ventral stress fibres appear to stretch in their central region (Peterson et al., 2004
). It is unclear whether this stretching is an active process, or whether it reflects pulling apart of filaments at the weakest point of the structure (Peterson et al., 2004
). Harder to understand is the mechanism of contraction in the periphery of the cell. In motile cells, this region shows uniform polarity (Cramer et al., 1997
). It is possible that the orientation of filaments is different in non-motile cells. Indeed, the formation of stress fibres in response to RhoA activation in non-motile fibroblasts occurs with very little new actin polymerisation (Machesky and Hall, 1997
), suggesting that the predominant mechanism is the bundling of existing actin filaments caused by increased myosin contractility, as originally proposed by Chrzanowska-Wodnicka and Burridge (Chrzanowska-Wodnicka and Burridge, 1996
). Clearly, much work remains if we are to find models that fully explain the experimental observations.
In a sarcomeric model of contraction, the shortening of the fibre is allowed because of the intercalation of arrays of actin and myosin. Non-sarcomeric models of stress fibre contraction face a problem – as non-muscle myosin slides actin filaments past each other,
-actinin should act as a roadblock to their movement. A potential solution to this problem comes from observations of the kinetics of the binding of
-actinin to actin filaments, which have been shown to allow cycles of rapid dissociation and reassociation both in vitro (Goldmann and Isenberg, 1993
), and live cell imaging (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006
). Such dynamic behaviour would allow contracting actin filaments to displace
-actinin, rapid rebinding maintaining the integrity of the structure (Fig. 1B).
| Signalling pathways |
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ROCK
Early breakthroughs in our understanding of the regulation of stress fibres came with the identification of downstream effectors of RhoA, in particular the ROCK/ROK protein kinases (Ishizaki et al., 1996
; Leung et al., 1995
) and the diaphanous-related formin, mDia1 (Watanabe et al., 1997
). ROCK-1 and ROCK-2 are serine/threonine kinases that are activated by RhoA binding and cause prominent stress fibre formation (Leung et al., 1996
). ROCK can also be inhibited by overexpression of the small GTPases RhoE (Riento et al., 2003
), Gem and Rad (Ward et al., 2002
), which block stress fibre formation. ROCK is localised in part to stress fibres (Katoh et al., 2001
) and phosphorylates at least four targets in the stress fibre pathway (Fig. 2) – all of which lead to increased myosin phosphorylation and increased actomyosin contractility.
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ROCK directly phosphorylates myosin light chain 2 (MLC2) at Ser19 (Amano et al., 1996
). This is one of the two sites phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) (Somlyo and Somlyo, 2003
), and phosphorylation by ROCK similarly leads to increased stress fibre contractility due to an increase in myosin ATPase activity (Katoh et al., 2001
). ROCK also phosphorylates MBS (MYPT) – the regulatory subunit of myosin light chain phosphatase. Phosphorylation of MBS by ROCK inhibits phosphatase activity (Kimura et al., 1996
), and so leads to increased MLC2 phosphorylation and increased stress fibre formation. Several ROCK-phosphorylation sites have been identified on MBS (Kawano et al., 1999
), of which the two most important appear to be Thr696 and Thr853 [human MYPT1 numbering (Feng et al., 1999
; Velasco et al., 2002
)]. Thr696 can be phosphorylated by several other protein kinases (Ito et al., 2004
) and occupancy of this site appears to be tonic in resting fibroblasts (Ren et al., 2004
). Phosphorylation of Thr853 appears to be a clearer marker of acute ROCK activation (Ren et al., 2004
; Wilson et al., 2005
) and leads to dissociation of the phosphatase complex from myosin (Velasco et al., 2002
). ROCK can also phosphorylate and activate CPI-17 in vitro (Koyama et al., 2000
) and in smooth muscle cells (Kitazawa et al., 2000
). CPI-17 is an inhibitor of myosin phosphatase, and activation of CPI-17 by other protein kinases leads to an increase in actomyosin contractility. Last but not least, ROCK has recently been shown to phosphorylate and activate Zipper-interacting protein kinase [ZIPK (Hagerty et al., 2007
)]. Activated ZIPK can in turn inhibit myosin phosphatase activity by phosphorylating the Thr696 site in MBS (MacDonald et al., 2001a
) and the Thr38 site in CPI-17 (MacDonald et al., 2001b
). ZIPK can also directly phosphorylate MLC2 at both Thr18 and Ser19 (Murata-Hori et al., 1999
).
The resulting picture is complex: ROCK lies at the centre of actomyosin contractility, phosphorylating both myosin and multiple myosin regulatory proteins. But which are the predominant pathways in stress fibre formation? CPI-17 is highly expressed in smooth muscle cells in comparison with non-muscle cells (Eto et al., 1997
) and it is unclear whether it is a significant target of ROCK outside of smooth muscle (Kolosova et al., 2004
; Ren et al., 2004
). An elegant study by Matsumura and co-workers targeted MBS and MLC separately to show that ROCK mediated phosphorylation of both proteins is necessary for stress fibre formation in fibroblasts (Totsukawa et al., 2004
). Whether these phosphorylations are directly through ROCK, or also indirectly through ROCK-mediated activation of ZIPK, remains to be explored.
mDia1
Activation of ROCK alone does not generate the thick, parallel stress fibres seen after RhoA activation – the activity of mDia1 is also required. ROCK activation produces thick stress fibres, but these typically form a star-like pattern in the centre of the cell (Leung et al., 1996
). Overexpression of mDia1 produces parallel actin filaments, but these are not thickly bundled (Watanabe et al., 1997
). Crucial work by Narumiya and co-workers showed that both activities are required to recapitulate the effects of active RhoA (Watanabe et al., 1999
). The cellular function of mDia1 is to nucleate the polymerisation of actin filaments from cell membranes, nucleation occurring at the barbed end of the nascent filaments (Kovar, 2006
). At the site of attachment of stress fibres to focal contacts in the plasma membrane, actin filaments adopt a uniform orientation in which their barbed ends are located at the contact site (Cramer et al., 1997
). The simplest model for mDia1 action is that it provides a nucleating activity in the focal contact to form a short actin bundle that can then be elongated into a stress fibre. In keeping with this, isolated focal adhesion complexes nucleate actin polymerisation and localise mDia1 (Butler et al., 2006
), and depletion of mDia1 in vivo significantly inhibits the formation of dorsal stress fibres (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006
).
| Stress fibres and cell migration |
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| Stress fibres and tail retraction |
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In motile fibroblasts, ventral stress fibres are oriented parallel to the axis of locomotion (Cramer et al., 1997
; Oliver et al., 1994
), which suggests that force generated by contraction of these structures could drive tail retraction. Tail retraction requires release and/or disassembly of focal adhesions at the rear of the cell, while adhesions at the front are maintained to allow application of traction forces. This disassembly of posterior adhesions is complex and poorly understood, but contractile force is important for this process (Cox and Huttenlocher, 1998
; Kirfel et al., 2004
). As ventral stress fibres are connected to focal adhesions at both ends, they are well placed to supply the contractile force required for turnover of adhesions at the rear of the cells. One major complication is that stress fibre contractility in non-motile cells causes strengthening of focal adhesions (Chrzanowska-Wodnicka and Burridge, 1996
). So, too little contractility would inhibit disassembly of posterior adhesions and tail retraction, whereas too much contractility would either increase adhesion to the point where cells became braced to the substrate, or break adhesions at both ends causing cells to become detached. In keeping with this, excessive RhoA activation inhibits cell migration (Arthur and Burridge, 2001
; Cox et al., 2001
), and inhibition of stress fibre contractility using the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632 can actually increase migration speed in some situations (Nobes and Hall, 1999
; Totsukawa et al., 2004
; Wojciak-Stothard and Ridley, 2003
). It seems that any contribution to tail retraction made by stress fibre contractility must be carefully balanced and integrated with other pathways controlling cell adhesion at the back and front of migrating cells. Indeed, motile cells have a gradient of adhesion, adhesions being stronger at the front than at the rear (Schmidt et al., 1993
).
Finally, it is also important to remember that fibroblasts are not the only motile cells in the village. Fish keratocytes have been the object of detailed study and are an example of cells with higher motility and lower adhesion than fibroblasts. Here it has been shown that the vector of contractile force is perpendicular to the direction of migration, and detailed studies by Small and colleagues have shown how actomyosin contractility contributes to tail retraction in these cells in ways that do not involve stress fibres (Small and Resch, 2005
).
| Stress fibres and persistence |
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| Isometric tension and static contraction |
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Myofibroblasts
Fibroblasts in normal connective tissue do not contain stress fibres (Byers et al., 1984
; Ehrlich and Hembry, 1984
). This fact has mutated on re-telling to create a piece of actin mythology – that stress fibres do not exist outside of a tissue culture dish. There are many situations where cells in the body produce stress fibres; however, these are specific conditions in which cells encounter (and then produce) mechanical force. Early studies of fibroblasts in wounds showed cells that have pronounced stress fibres – these were termed myofibroblasts or granulation tissue fibroblasts (Gabbiani et al., 1971
).
Myofibroblasts in dermal wound tissue arise from the differentiation of tissue fibroblasts (Ross et al., 1970
) and circulating fibrocyte progenitors (Hinz et al., 2007
), both of which migrate into the centre of the wound site. As cells enter the wound they experience tension, which causes them to assemble stress fibres and become proto-myofibroblasts (Hinz et al., 2001a
; Tomasek et al., 2002
). This effect can be mimicked in vitro by plating fibroblasts on a rigid support (i.e. a plastic tissue culture dish), whereas loss of substrate rigidity causes a rapid loss of stress fibres (Couchman and Rees, 1979
; Mochitate et al., 1991
). Tension, together with the effects of TGF
1 and alterations to the composition of the extracellular matrix, then leads to further differentiation of proto-myofibroblasts into myofibroblasts (Tomasek et al., 2002
). This differentiation process is accompanied by expression of
-smooth muscle actin (
SMA), which becomes incorporated into myofibroblast stress fibres (Darby et al., 1990
). Stress fibres that contain
SMA generate more contractile force than normal stress fibres, which contain only
- and
-cytoplasmic actin (Hinz et al., 2001b
). This increased contractile force strengthens focal adhesions, leading to the formation of the large `supermature' focal adhesions (fibronexi) characteristic of these cells (Hinz, 2006
). Interestingly, RhoA has recently been implicated in the induction of
SMA downstream of TGF
1 during smooth muscle cell differentiation (Chen et al., 2006
) – this acute regulator of actin stress fibres might therefore also give rise to long-term changes in stress fibre function by pushing cells to become more smooth-muscle-like.
The majority of myofibroblasts in a slit wound orientate their stress fibres along the long axis of the wound (Fig. 3A), although in the central region of the wound, some show orientation across the short axis (Petroll et al., 1993
). This situation can be presumed to indicate the major vector of tension in such a wound; however, the outcome is at first sight counterintuitive – why doesn't contractile force along the long axis make the wound gape, not close? One plausible explanation is that the force generated by myofibroblasts is largely used to remodel the extracellular matrix in the wound to allow closure. Myofibroblast stress fibres are mechanically linked to the extracellular matrix through their large focal adhesions (Singer et al., 1984
) and the contractile forces generated through this coupling cause alignment of collagen fibres in the wound into parallel bundles along the long axis (Gabbiani et al., 1971
; Hinz et al., 2001b
). This remodelling and contraction of the extracellular matrix would then contribute to the resolution of the wound site (Tomasek et al., 2002
). Indeed, myofibroblasts in non-wound sites are found in tissues that require significant matrix remodelling (Sappino et al., 1990
) – for example, the developing lung septa (Vaccaro and Brody, 1978
; Yamada et al., 2005
) and the uterine submucosa (Glasser and Julian, 1986
). The role of the contractile forces generated by stress fibres in myofibroblasts is thus not generation of motility but isometric tension and consequent reshaping of the extracellular matrix.
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Contractile epithelial cells and myoepithelial cells
Epithelial cells around the border of a wound assemble actomyosin cables at the wound edge that are mechanically linked to those in adjacent cells, forming a contractile `purse-string' around the edge of the wound (Fig. 3A) (Bement et al., 1993
; Martin and Lewis, 1992
). Contraction of this structure depends on the activities of RhoA (Brock et al., 1996
) and ROCK (Tamada et al., 2007
) and provides the forces required to draw the edges of the epithelial sheet together to cover the wound surface. The precise relationship of this actomyosin structure to stress fibres is unclear. Clearly, similar components are involved, although the ends of the purse-string actin cables are connected not to focal contacts but to catenins in adherens junctions (Danjo and Gipson, 1998
). This allows mechanical linkage between adjacent cells, and the force to be directed along the wound axis. There are strong parallels between wound healing and the closure of epithelial sheets during the processes of embryogenesis (Martin and Parkhurst, 2004
). The same actin-purse-string mechanism is used during dorsal closure, in a process that similarly requires RhoA (Harden et al., 1999
; Martin and Parkhurst, 2004
). Further, mice lacking ROCK fail to close their eyelids during development or to close their ventral body wall efficiently – both processes have marked similarities to wound healing and dorsal closure (Shimizu et al., 2005
; Thumkeo et al., 2005
). In all of these events, actomyosin is used not to power cell motility, but to provide a static, asymmetric contraction, which contributes to the orderly closing of a gap in the epithelium. Further work is needed to tell us more about the formation of these purse-string cable structures and their relationship to conventional actin stress fibres.
As fibroblasts can give rise to specialised contractile myofibroblasts, so epithelial cells can give rise to myoepithelial cells (Gudjonsson et al., 2005
). These cells form a basket-like network around the epithelial ducts of many exocrine glands. They are best studied in mammary glands, where their static contraction squeezes the duct to expel milk (Gudjonsson et al., 2005
; Redman, 1994
); however, they are also present in salivary, sweat and lacrimal glands, where they are presumed to play a similar role. Like myofibroblasts, myoepithelial cells contain numerous stress fibres (Haguenau, 1959
) and
SMA (Skalli et al., 1986
). The contraction of mammary myoepithelial cells is triggered by oxytocin, which causes milk release. Oxytocin stimulation leads to myosin phosphorylation in myoepithelial cells (Olins and Bremel, 1982
). The signalling pathways involved are not fully defined – oxytocin mobilises Ca2+, which would lead to MLCK activation and consequent phosphorylation of myosin (Reversi et al., 2005
); however, oxytocin can also trigger activation of RhoA and ROCK in other tissues (Tahara et al., 2002
). By analogy with smooth muscle, it is possible that acute myoepithelial contraction is regulated largely by Ca2+/MLCK in response to oxytocin, and RhoA/ROCK has a potentiating role, increasing sensitivity and force.
| Stress in the vasculature |
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Blood vessels are supported by a casing of contractile cells. Larger vessels are surrounded by a layer of vascular smooth muscle cells, which resist hydrostatic pressure and regulate vascular tone. Small capillaries and lymphatic vessels are coated in pericytes, a third subtype of specialised contractile cell (Fig. 3) (Betsholtz et al., 2005
). Pericytes are derived from mesenchymal precursors and can further differentiate into vascular smooth muscle cells. They have thick actin stress fibres and, like myoepithelial cells and myofibroblasts, they express
SMA as well as non-muscle myosin (Herman and D'Amore, 1985
). The signals regulating pericyte contractility are unknown at this time.
| Conclusions and Perspectives |
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| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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