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Geometric Signatures of Switching Behavior in Mechanobiology

ORAL

Abstract

The proteins involved in cell's mechanobiological processes have evolved specialized and surprising responses to applied forces. One example is catch-slip bonding, where a protein-protein bond switches from increasing strength to decreasing strength under increasing force. Another example is force-induced pathway switching, where a multi-pathway biochemical transformation switches from one pathway to another under applied force. These force-activated switching behaviors are important in various biological functions, from cell adhesion and mechanosensing, to molecular motors, proofreading, and antigen discrimination. We develop a theoretical framework that unifies these switching behaviors and identifies the signatures of a system's free energy landscape that generate specific switches. Remarkably, we find that almost every 2-dimensional bond will show catch-slip behavior under an appropriate pulling force—no specialized mechanisms are required. We use this framework to identify the signatures of switching in established catch bond models and we propose course-grained free energy landscapes for P-selectin, integrin, and actin/myosin catch bonds based on experimental data. Our framework suggests design principles for engineering novel bond behaviors and provides clues how sophisticated bonding mechanisms may have evolved from simple bonds.

Publication: Preprint (submitted): https://arxiv.org/abs/2209.03324<br>Title: Geometric Signatures of Switching Behavior in Mechanobiology<br>Authors: Casey O. Barkan and Robijn F. Bruinsma

Presenters

  • Casey Barkan

    University of California, Los Angeles

Authors

  • Casey Barkan

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Robijn F Bruinsma

    University of California, Los Angeles