Issue 30, 2020

Tensional homeostasis at different length scales

Abstract

Tensional homeostasis is a phenomenon of fundamental importance in mechanobiology. It refers to the ability of organs, tissues, and cells to respond to external disturbances by maintaining a homeostatic (set point) level of mechanical stress (tension). It is well documented that breakdown in tensional homeostasis is the hallmark of progression of diseases, including cancer and atherosclerosis. In this review, we surveyed quantitative studies of tensional homeostasis with the goal of providing characterization of this phenomenon across a broad range of length scales, from the organ level to the subcellular level. We considered both static and dynamics approaches that have been used in studies of this phenomenon. Results that we found in the literature and that we obtained from our own investigations suggest that tensional homeostasis is an emergent phenomenon driven by collective rheostatic mechanisms associated with focal adhesions, and by a collective action of cells in multicellular forms, whose impact on tensional homeostasis is cell type-dependent and cell microenvironment-dependent. Additionally, the finding that cadherins, adhesion molecules that are important for formation of cell–cell junctions, promote tensional homeostasis even in single cells, demonstrates their relevance as a signaling moiety.

Graphical abstract: Tensional homeostasis at different length scales

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
27 Apr 2020
Accepted
16 Jul 2020
First published
16 Jul 2020

Soft Matter, 2020,16, 6946-6963

Author version available

Tensional homeostasis at different length scales

D. Stamenović and M. L. Smith, Soft Matter, 2020, 16, 6946 DOI: 10.1039/D0SM00763C

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