Membrane Elastic Properties During Neural Precursor Cell Differentiation

Neural precursor cells differentiate into several cell types that display distinct functions. However, little is known about how cell surface mechanics vary during the differentiation process. Here, by precisely measuring membrane tension and bending modulus, we map their variations and correlate th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cells (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2020-05, Vol.9 (6), p.1323
Hauptverfasser: Soares, Juliana, Araujo, Glauber R de S, Santana, Cintia, Matias, Diana, Moura-Neto, Vivaldo, Farina, Marcos, Frases, Susana, Viana, Nathan B, Romão, Luciana, Nussenzveig, H Moysés, Pontes, Bruno
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Neural precursor cells differentiate into several cell types that display distinct functions. However, little is known about how cell surface mechanics vary during the differentiation process. Here, by precisely measuring membrane tension and bending modulus, we map their variations and correlate them with changes in neural precursor cell morphology along their distinct differentiation fates. Both cells maintained in culture as neural precursors as well as those plated in neurobasal medium reveal a decrease in membrane tension over the first hours of culture followed by stabilization, with no change in bending modulus. During astrocyte differentiation, membrane tension initially decreases and then increases after 72 h, accompanied by consolidation of glial fibrillary acidic protein expression and striking actin reorganization, while bending modulus increases following observed alterations. For oligodendrocytes, the changes in membrane tension are less abrupt over the first hours, but their values subsequently decrease, correlating with a shift from oligodendrocyte marker O4 to myelin basic protein expressions and a remarkable actin reorganization, while bending modulus remains constant. Oligodendrocytes at later differentiation stages show membrane vesicles with similar membrane tension but higher bending modulus as compared to the cell surface. Altogether, our results display an entire spectrum of how membrane elastic properties are varying, thus contributing to a better understanding of neural differentiation from a mechanobiological perspective.
ISSN:2073-4409
2073-4409
DOI:10.3390/cells9061323