Issue 45, 2024

Scale-dependent interactions enable emergent microrheological stress response of actin–vimentin composites

Abstract

The mechanical properties of the mammalian cell regulate many cellular functions and are largely dictated by the cytoskeleton, a composite network of protein filaments, including actin, microtubules, and intermediate filaments. Interactions between these distinct filaments give rise to emergent mechanical properties that are difficult to generate synthetically, and recent studies have made great strides in advancing our understanding of the mechanical interplay between actin and microtubule filaments. While intermediate filaments play critical roles in the stress response of cells, their effect on the rheological properties of the composite cytoskeleton remains poorly understood. Here, we use optical tweezers microrheology to measure the linear viscoelastic properties and nonlinear stress response of composites of actin and vimentin with varying molar ratios of actin to vimentin. We reveal a surprising, nearly opposite effect of actin–vimentin network mechanics compared to single-component networks in the linear versus nonlinear regimes. Namely, the linear elastic plateau modulus and zero-shear viscosity are markedly reduced in composites compared to single-component networks of actin or vimentin, whereas the initial response force and stiffness are maximized in composites versus single-component networks in the nonlinear regime. While these emergent trends are indicative of distinct interactions between actin and vimentin, nonlinear stiffening and long-time stress response appear to both be dictated primarily by actin, at odds with previous bulk rheology studies. We demonstrate that these complex, scale-dependent effects arise from the varied contributions of network density, filament stiffness, non-specific interactions, and poroelasticity to the mechanical response at different spatiotemporal scales. Cells may harness this complex behavior to facilitate distinct stress responses at different scales and in response to different stimuli to allow for their hallmark multifunctionality.

Graphical abstract: Scale-dependent interactions enable emergent microrheological stress response of actin–vimentin composites

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Aug 2024
Accepted
28 Oct 2024
First published
30 Oct 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 9007-9021

Scale-dependent interactions enable emergent microrheological stress response of actin–vimentin composites

J. Pinchiaroli, R. Saldanha, A. E. Patteson, R. M. Robertson-Anderson and B. J. Gurmessa, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 9007 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00988F

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