Membrane Tension Regulation is Required for Wound Repair

2024-10-03 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Membrane Tension Regulation is Required for Wound Repair​
Raj, N.; Weiß, M. S.; Vos, B. E.; Weischer, S.; Brinkmann, F.; Betz, T. & Trappmann, B. et al.​ (2024) 
Advanced Science, pp. e2402317​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202402317 

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Authors
Raj, Nikita; Weiß, Martin S.; Vos, Bart E.; Weischer, Sarah; Brinkmann, Frauke; Betz, Timo; Trappmann, Britta; Gerke, Volker
Abstract
Disruptions of the eukaryotic plasma membrane due to chemical and mechanical challenges are frequent and detrimental and thus need to be repaired to maintain proper cell function and avoid cell death. However, the cellular mechanisms involved in wound resealing and restoration of homeostasis are diverse and contended. Here, it is shown that clathrin-mediated endocytosis is induced at later stages of plasma membrane wound repair following the actual resealing of the wound. This compensatory endocytosis occurs near the wound, predominantly at sites of previous early endosome exocytosis which is required in the initial stage of membrane resealing, suggesting a spatio-temporal co-ordination of exo- and endocytosis during wound repair. Using cytoskeletal alterations and modulations of membrane tension and membrane area, membrane tension is identified as a major regulator of the wounding-associated exo- and endocytic events that mediate efficient wound repair. Thus, membrane tension changes are a universal trigger for plasma membrane wound repair modulating the exocytosis of early endosomes required for resealing and subsequent clathrin-mediated endocytosis acting at later stages to restore cell homeostasis and function.
Issue Date
3-October-2024
Journal
Advanced Science 
ISSN
2198-3844; 2198-3844
eISSN
2198-3844
Language
English

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