Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

High density of intracellular macromolecules creates a special condition known as macromolecular crowding (MC). One well-established consequence of MC is that only a slight change in the concentration of macromolecules (e.g., proteins) results in a shift of chemical equilibria towards the formation of macromolecular complexes and oligomers. This suggests a physiological mechanism of converting cell density changes into cellular responses. In this review, we start by providing a general overview of MC; then we examine the available experimental evidence that MC may act as a direct signaling factor in several types of cellular activities: mechano- and osmosensing, cell volume recovery in anisosmotic solutions, and apoptotic shrinkage. The latter phenomenon is analyzed in particular detail, as persistent shrinkage is known both to cause apoptosis and to occur during apoptosis resulting from other stimuli. We point to specific apoptotic reactions that involve formation of macromolecular complexes and, therefore, may provide a link between shrinkage and downstream responses.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.33594/000000319DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

macromolecular crowding
8
cell volume
8
formation macromolecular
8
macromolecular complexes
8
macromolecular
4
crowding hidden
4
hidden link
4
link cell
4
volume high
4
high density
4

Similar Publications

Multicellular organisms generate organizational complexity through morphogenesis, in which mechanical forces orchestrate the movements and deformations of cells and tissues, while chemical signals regulate the molecular events that generate and coordinate these forces. One common denominator that is critical both for mechanics and biochemistry is material property. Material properties define how materials deform or rearrange under applied forces, and how rapidly molecules interact or spread in space and time.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tumor development is accompanied by strong physico-chemical modifications. Among them, compressive stress can emerge in both the epithelial and stromal compartments. Using a simple two-dimensional compression assay which consisted in placing an agarose weight on top of adherent cells, we studied the impact of compressive stress on cell proliferation and motility in different pancreatic cancer cell lines.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Advancing the design and construction of artificial protocells with organized complexity, diverse functionality and practical applicability is urgently demanded in vitro synthetic biology and bioengineering but remains a grand challenge. Here, we present a versatile Pickering emulsion-based encapsulation approach to transform membraneless coacervate compartments into robust multicompartmental hybrid microreactors, which concurrently assimilate the expected attributes of hierarchically compartmentalized structure, molecularly crowded environment, selectively permeable ability and mechanically reinforced stability. Single or multiple biological and non-biological catalytic species can be spatially sequestered in specific domains of the hybrid microreactor, enabling spatiotemporal regulation of individual biocatalysis or divergent cascades with high reaction efficiency.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protein-carbohydrate interactions play crucial roles in important biological processes, including cellular differentiation, cell-cell adhesion, mitogenicity, and microbial and viral infections. Our present understanding in this area is largely due to lectins, a unique class of carbohydrate-binding proteins. In view of their ability to differentiate between normal and tumor cells, as well as their potential applications in cancer diagnosis, prognosis, and therapy, it is important to comprehend how the crowding milieu can modulate the structural features and carbohydrate-binding properties of lectins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cell-free expression (CFE) systems are emerging as a powerful tool in synthetic biology, with diverse applications from prototyping genetic circuits to serving as a platform for point-of-care biosensors. When multiple genes need to be expressed in the same CFE reaction, their DNA templates (often added as plasmids) are generally assumed to behave independently of each other, with neither affecting the other's expression. However, recent work in CFE systems shows that multiple aspects of these templates can lead to antagonistic or synergistic interactions in expression levels of individual genes, a phenomenon referred to as plasmid crosstalk.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF