9/3b Cell Biology/Mechanotransduction Flashcards
how to treat a ptnt with tight heel cords(achilles tendonds)?
apply serial casting to lengthen the tissue and normalize gait
Tendon
connective tissue faint lines in the direction of pull transmit force in the line of direction two main components: 1. Cells (fibroblasts) 2. Extracellular Matrix (glycoproteins and collagen)
What are the cells of the tendon like?
they are called fibroblasts and they are all lined up in parallel between the fibers.
They Produce, Manufacture, and Secrete all the components of the ECM
Extracellular matrix of the tendon
the ground substance is proteins
it is HYDROPHILLIC (water attracting)
Glycoproteins link the ECM components to each other
Collagen is TYPE I - it is more rigid than flexible so you can relay force on to the muscle
Cytoskeleton
microfilaments
microtubules
Both of the above provide a continuous chain of communication from the outside of the cell to the nucleus - critical for shape and structure of cell
Connect cell to cell
junctions
process through which cells sense and respond to mechanical stimuli by converting them to biochemical signals that elicit specific cellular responses
Mechanotransduction
Mechanotransduction pathway
mechanical stimulus (cast) Tissue forces (impacts tissues) cellular forces (forces stimulate the cells) molecular response (leads to a response)
Forces that tendons respond to at the tissue level:
tensile compressive hydrostatic fluid shear shear vibration
process for sensing mechanical stimuli
- integrins on cell membrane allow for direct cell communication between cells through mechanical stimuli
- conformational change - shape change of the integrim
- stretch activated ion channels
- receptor shape change - ligand shape change
how is the mechanical signal transduced?
DNA RNA -> Protein
- transduction from membrane to nuc
- activate genes coding for collagen - trascription
- dna->rna - translation by ribosomes
- rna->pre-procollagen - Processing by ER, Golgi
- pre-procollagen -> procollagen - exocytosis
- extracellular procesing and org
biological tissue with responses to mechanical stress
connective tissue, integumentary system, cardiopulm, neuromuscular
Physical stress theory
changes in the relative level of physical stress cause a predictable response in all biological tissue
Force/Area
Thresholds of the physical stress theory
define the boundaries for an effective DOSE (Amount of force, duration, and Frequency)
- Injury
- increased tolerance (hypertrophy)
- maintenance
- decreased tolerance (atrophy)
- death
Stress
composite level of magnitude, time, and direction