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New publication in Nature Cell Biology forÌýPaluch, Salbreux and CharrasÌýLabs

25 May 2017

NCB2017

Ìý

Actin cortex architecture regulates cell surface tension

Authors: Priyamvada Chugh,ÌýAndrew G. Clark,ÌýMatthew B. Smith, Davide A. D. Cassani,ÌýKai Dierkes, Anan Ragab,ÌýPhilippe P. Roux,ÌýGuillaume Charras,ÌýGuillaume SalbreuxÌý& Ewa K. Paluch.

Animal cell shape is largely determined by the cortex, a thin actin network underlying the plasma membrane in which myosin-driven stresses generate contractile tension. Tension gradients result in local contractions and drive cell deformations. Understanding tension generation is thus essential to understand cell shape control. Up to now, cortex tension was thought to be mostly determined by cortical myosin motors. In this new publication, the Paluch lab shows that the spatial organisation of actin filaments in the cortical network is equally important. They combine molecular biology, biophysical measurements and quantitative imaging, and develop a computational model of the cortex, developed in collaboration with Guillaume Salbreux (Francis Crick Institute), to investigate how cortex thickness affects tension. This interdisciplinary work demonstrates that actin network architecture, alongside myosin activity, is key to cell surface tension regulation.