articleThe Journal of Cell BiologyMay 1, 2006BRONZE OA

Stress fibers are generated by two distinct actin assembly mechanisms in motile cells

University of Helsinki

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Stress fibers play a central role in adhesion, motility, and morphogenesis of eukaryotic cells, but the mechanism of how these and other contractile actomyosin structures are generated is not known. By analyzing stress fiber assembly pathways using live cell microscopy, we revealed that these structures are generated by two distinct mechanisms. Dorsal stress fibers, which are connected to the substrate via a focal adhesion at one end, are assembled through formin (mDia1/DRF1)-driven actin polymerization at focal adhesions. In contrast, transverse arcs, which are not directly anchored to substrate, are generated by endwise annealing of myosin bundles and Arp2/3-nucleated actin bundles at the lamella.…

Citation impact

913
total citations
FWCI
15.99
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100%
References
47
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Formins
  • Actin
  • Stress fiber
  • Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching
  • MDia1
  • Biophysics
  • Actin remodeling
  • Cell biology
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