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External strain on the plasma membrane is relayed to the endoplasmic reticulum by membrane contact sites and alters cellular energetics

Ziming Chen, Peilin Chen, Jiayue Li, Euphemie Landao‐Bassonga, J. M. Papadimitriou, Junjie Gao, Delin Liu, Andrew Tai, Jinjin Ma, David G. Lloyd, Brendan F. Kennedy, Minghao Zheng

2025Science Advances12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mechanotransduction is essential for living cells to adapt to their extracellular environment. However, it is unclear how the biophysical adaptation of intracellular organelles responds to mechanical stress or how these adaptive changes affect cellular homeostasis. Here, using the tendon cell as a mechanosensitive cell type within a bioreactor, we show that the tension of the plasma membrane (PM) and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) adaptively increases in response to repetitive external stimuli. Depletion of stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1), the highest expressed PM-ER tether protein, interfered with mechanotransduction from the PM to the ER, and affected the ER tension. We found that an optimized mechanical strain increased ER tension in a homeostatic manner, but excessive strain resulted in ER expansion, as well as activating ER stress. Last, we showed that changes in ER tension were linked with ER-mitochondria interactions and associated with cellular energetics and function. Together, these findings identify a PM-ER mechanotransduction mechanism that dose-dependently regulates cellular metabolism.

Topics & Concepts

MechanotransductionEndoplasmic reticulumMechanosensitive channelsCell biologyUnfolded protein responseChemistryExtracellularOrganelleMembrane contact siteHomeostasisCellular compartmentBiophysicsBiologyMembraneCellMembrane proteinBiochemistryIon channelIntegral membrane proteinReceptorEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and DiseaseErythrocyte Function and PathophysiologyCellular transport and secretion
External strain on the plasma membrane is relayed to the endoplasmic reticulum by membrane contact sites and alters cellular energetics | Litcius