Susana M Beltrán, Marvin J Slepian, Rebecca E Taylor
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引用次数: 0
摘要
在纳米尺度上,推力、拉力和剪切力驱动着发育和重塑以及伤口愈合和疾病进展的生化过程。机械生物学领域的研究不仅探讨了这些负荷如何影响生化信号通路,还探讨了信号通路如何通过触发机械变化(如组织的区域僵化)来响应局部负荷。越来越多的人认识到,机械信号和生化信号之间的这种反馈在胚胎发育、组织形态发生、细胞信号传导和疾病发病机制中起着根本性的作用。从历史上看,机械生物学这一跨学科领域是由测量和操纵细胞与分子力的技术发展所推动的,每一种新工具都会带来大量新的研究方向。在这篇综述中,我们将讨论分子尺度力和应变传感器的制造和功能方面的最新进展。我们还展示了 DNA 纳米技术如何对现有技术的提升和未来机械传感器组装独特能力的开发起到关键作用。DNA 是一种反应灵敏、可编程的传感器制造材料。它能利用 1 到 200 pN 级的力对分子生物力学进行系统检测,而这正是阐明细胞和蛋白质传递机械信号的基本方法所需要的。
Extending the Capabilities of Molecular Force Sensors via DNA Nanotechnology.
At the nanoscale, pushing, pulling, and shearing forces drive biochemical processes in development and remodeling as well as in wound healing and disease progression. Research in the field of mechanobiology investigates not only how these loads affect biochemical signaling pathways but also how signaling pathways respond to local loading by triggering mechanical changes such as regional stiffening of a tissue. This feedback between mechanical and biochemical signaling is increasingly recognized as fundamental in embryonic development, tissue morphogenesis, cell signaling, and disease pathogenesis. Historically, the interdisciplinary field of mechanobiology has been driven by the development of technologies for measuring and manipulating cellular and molecular forces, with each new tool enabling vast new lines of inquiry. In this review, we discuss recent advances in the manufacturing and capabilities of molecular-scale force and strain sensors. We also demonstrate how DNA nanotechnology has been critical to the enhancement of existing techniques and to the development of unique capabilities for future mechanosensor assembly. DNA is a responsive and programmable building material for sensor fabrication. It enables the systematic interrogation of molecular biomechanics with forces at the 1- to 200-pN scale that are needed to elucidate the fundamental means by which cells and proteins transduce mechanical signals.
期刊介绍:
Biomedical engineering has been characterized as the application of concepts drawn from engineering, computing, communications, mathematics, and the physical sciences to scientific and applied problems in the field of medicine and biology. Concepts and methodologies in biomedical engineering extend throughout the medical and biological sciences. This journal attempts to critically review a wide range of research and applied activities in the field. More often than not, topics chosen for inclusion are concerned with research and practice issues of current interest. Experts writing each review bring together current knowledge and historical information that has led to the current state-of-the-art.