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Area of Science:

  • Cell Biology
  • Biophysics
  • Systems Biology

Background:

  • Cell shape is a critical indicator of cellular health and function.
  • The mechanisms by which cells decode shape-related information remain largely unknown.
  • Plasma membrane curvature is a potential mediator for translating shape into cellular signals.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how cell shape elongation impacts plasma membrane signaling.
  • To explore the hypothesis that plasma membrane curvature changes decode shape information.
  • To determine if cell shape acts as a form of information storage.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized analytical mathematical approaches and numerical simulations to model cell shape effects on signaling.
  • Analyzed the distribution of activated receptors in relation to plasma membrane curvature.
  • Performed experimental validation by manipulating cellular eccentricity.

Main Results:

  • Mathematical analysis showed transient accumulation of activated receptors at higher curvature regions with increased cell eccentricity.
  • This receptor distribution followed a periodic pattern (Mathieu function) due to reaction-diffusion imbalances.
  • Numerical simulations demonstrated that these receptor microdomains amplify downstream signals, increasing activated cytoplasmic Src and nuclear MAPK1,2 levels in growth factor receptor pathways.

Conclusions:

  • Cell shape, specifically eccentricity, directly influences plasma membrane signaling dynamics.
  • Activated receptor accumulation at curved membrane regions amplifies intracellular signaling pathways.
  • Experimental validation confirmed that cell shape serves as a locus for retrievable information storage.