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Dive into the research topics where Alberto Elosegui-Artola is active.

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Featured researches published by Alberto Elosegui-Artola.


Nature Cell Biology | 2015

Control of cell–cell forces and collective cell dynamics by the intercellular adhesome

Elsa Bazellières; Vito Conte; Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Xavier Serra-Picamal; María Bintanel-Morcillo; Pere Roca-Cusachs; José J. Muñoz; Marta Sales-Pardo; Roger Guimerà; Xavier Trepat

Dynamics of epithelial tissues determine key processes in development, tissue healing and cancer invasion. These processes are critically influenced by cell–cell adhesion forces. However, the identity of the proteins that resist and transmit forces at cell–cell junctions remains unclear, and how these proteins control tissue dynamics is largely unknown. Here we provide a systematic study of the interplay between cell–cell adhesion proteins, intercellular forces and epithelial tissue dynamics. We show that collective cellular responses to selective perturbations of the intercellular adhesome conform to three mechanical phenotypes. These phenotypes are controlled by different molecular modules and characterized by distinct relationships between cellular kinematics and intercellular forces. We show that these forces and their rates can be predicted by the concentrations of cadherins and catenins. Unexpectedly, we identified different mechanical roles for P-cadherin and E-cadherin; whereas P-cadherin predicts levels of intercellular force, E-cadherin predicts the rate at which intercellular force builds up.


Nature Cell Biology | 2016

Mechanical regulation of a molecular clutch defines force transmission and transduction in response to matrix rigidity

Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Roger Oria; Yunfeng Chen; Anita Joanna Kosmalska; Carlos Pérez-González; Natalia Castro; Cheng Zhu; Xavier Trepat; Pere Roca-Cusachs

Cell function depends on tissue rigidity, which cells probe by applying and transmitting forces to their extracellular matrix, and then transducing them into biochemical signals. Here we show that in response to matrix rigidity and density, force transmission and transduction are explained by the mechanical properties of the actin–talin–integrin–fibronectin clutch. We demonstrate that force transmission is regulated by a dynamic clutch mechanism, which unveils its fundamental biphasic force/rigidity relationship on talin depletion. Force transduction is triggered by talin unfolding above a stiffness threshold. Below this threshold, integrins unbind and release force before talin can unfold. Above the threshold, talin unfolds and binds to vinculin, leading to adhesion growth and YAP nuclear translocation. Matrix density, myosin contractility, integrin ligation and talin mechanical stability differently and nonlinearly regulate both force transmission and the transduction threshold. In all cases, coupling of talin unfolding dynamics to a theoretical clutch model quantitatively predicts cell response.


Nature Materials | 2014

Rigidity sensing and adaptation through regulation of integrin types.

Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Elsa Bazellières; Michael D. Allen; Ion Andreu; Roger Oria; Raimon Sunyer; Jennifer J. Gomm; John Marshall; J. Louise Jones; Xavier Trepat; Pere Roca-Cusachs

Tissue rigidity regulates processes in development, cancer and wound healing. However, how cells detect rigidity, and thereby modulate their behaviour, remains unknown. Here, we show that sensing and adaptation to matrix rigidity in breast myoepithelial cells is determined by the bond dynamics of different integrin types. Cell binding to fibronectin through either α5β1 integrins (constitutively expressed) or αvβ6 integrins (selectively expressed in cancer and development) adapts force generation, actin flow, and integrin recruitment to rigidities associated with healthy or malignant tissue, respectively. In vitro experiments and theoretical modelling further demonstrate that this behaviour is explained by the different binding and unbinding rates of both integrin types to fibronectin. Moreover, rigidity sensing through differences in integrin bond dynamics applies both when integrins bind separately and when they compete for binding to fibronectin.


Science | 2016

Collective cell durotaxis emerges from long-range intercellular force transmission

Raimon Sunyer; Vito Conte; Jorge Escribano; Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Anna Labernadie; Léo Valon; Daniel Navajas; J.M. García-Aznar; José J. Muñoz; Pere Roca-Cusachs; Xavier Trepat

The ability of cells to follow gradients of extracellular matrix stiffness—durotaxis—has been implicated in development, fibrosis, and cancer. Here, we found multicellular clusters that exhibited durotaxis even if isolated constituent cells did not. This emergent mode of directed collective cell migration applied to a variety of epithelial cell types, required the action of myosin motors, and originated from supracellular transmission of contractile physical forces. To explain the observed phenomenology, we developed a generalized clutch model in which local stick-slip dynamics of cell-matrix adhesions was integrated to the tissue level through cell-cell junctions. Collective durotaxis is far more efficient than single-cell durotaxis; it thus emerges as a robust mechanism to direct cell migration during development, wound healing, and collective cancer cell invasion.


Cell | 2017

Force Triggers YAP Nuclear Entry by Regulating Transport across Nuclear Pores

Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Ion Andreu; Amy E. M. Beedle; Ainhoa Lezamiz; Marina Uroz; Anita Joanna Kosmalska; Roger Oria; Jenny Z. Kechagia; Palma Rico-Lastres; Anabel-Lise Le Roux; Catherine M. Shanahan; Xavier Trepat; Daniel Navajas; Sergi Garcia-Manyes; Pere Roca-Cusachs

YAP is a mechanosensitive transcriptional activator with a critical role in cancer, regeneration, and organ size control. Here, we show that force applied to the nucleus directly drives YAP nuclear translocation by decreasing the mechanical restriction of nuclear pores to molecular transport. Exposure to a stiff environment leads cells to establish a mechanical connection between the nucleus and the cytoskeleton, allowing forces exerted through focal adhesions to reach the nucleus. Force transmission then leads to nuclear flattening, which stretches nuclear pores, reduces their mechanical resistance to molecular transport, and increases YAP nuclear import. The restriction to transport is further regulated by the mechanical stability of the transported protein, which determines both active nuclear transport of YAP and passive transport of small proteins. Our results unveil a mechanosensing mechanism mediated directly by nuclear pores, demonstrated for YAP but with potential general applicability in transcriptional regulation.


Nature Communications | 2015

Physical principles of membrane remodelling during cell mechanoadaptation

Anita Joanna Kosmalska; Laura Casares; Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Joseph Jose Thottacherry; Roberto Moreno-Vicente; Víctor González-Tarragó; Miguel A. del Pozo; Satyajit Mayor; Marino Arroyo; Daniel Navajas; Xavier Trepat; Nils C. Gauthier; Pere Roca-Cusachs

Biological processes in any physiological environment involve changes in cell shape, which must be accommodated by their physical envelope—the bilayer membrane. However, the fundamental biophysical principles by which the cell membrane allows for and responds to shape changes remain unclear. Here we show that the 3D remodelling of the membrane in response to a broad diversity of physiological perturbations can be explained by a purely mechanical process. This process is passive, local, almost instantaneous, before any active remodelling and generates different types of membrane invaginations that can repeatedly store and release large fractions of the cell membrane. We further demonstrate that the shape of those invaginations is determined by the minimum elastic and adhesive energy required to store both membrane area and liquid volume at the cell–substrate interface. Once formed, cells reabsorb the invaginations through an active process with duration of the order of minutes.


Nature | 2017

Force loading explains spatial sensing of ligands by cells

Roger Oria; Tina Wiegand; Jorge Escribano; Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Juan J. Uriarte; Cristian Moreno-Pulido; Ilia Platzman; Pietro Delcanale; Lorenzo Albertazzi; Daniel Navajas; Xavier Trepat; J.M. García-Aznar; Elisabetta Ada Cavalcanti-Adam; Pere Roca-Cusachs

Cells can sense the density and distribution of extracellular matrix (ECM) molecules by means of individual integrin proteins and larger, integrin-containing adhesion complexes within the cell membrane. This spatial sensing drives cellular activity in a variety of normal and pathological contexts. Previous studies of cells on rigid glass surfaces have shown that spatial sensing of ECM ligands takes place at the nanometre scale, with integrin clustering and subsequent formation of focal adhesions impaired when single integrin–ligand bonds are separated by more than a few tens of nanometres. It has thus been suggested that a crosslinking ‘adaptor’ protein of this size might connect integrins to the actin cytoskeleton, acting as a molecular ruler that senses ligand spacing directly. Here, we develop gels whose rigidity and nanometre-scale distribution of ECM ligands can be controlled and altered. We find that increasing the spacing between ligands promotes the growth of focal adhesions on low-rigidity substrates, but leads to adhesion collapse on more-rigid substrates. Furthermore, disordering the ligand distribution drastically increases adhesion growth, but reduces the rigidity threshold for adhesion collapse. The growth and collapse of focal adhesions are mirrored by, respectively, the nuclear or cytosolic localization of the transcriptional regulator protein YAP. We explain these findings not through direct sensing of ligand spacing, but by using an expanded computational molecular-clutch model, in which individual integrin–ECM bonds—the molecular clutches—respond to force loading by recruiting extra integrins, up to a maximum value. This generates more clutches, redistributing the overall force among them, and reducing the force loading per clutch. At high rigidity and high ligand spacing, maximum recruitment is reached, preventing further force redistribution and leading to adhesion collapse. Measurements of cellular traction forces and actin flow speeds support our model. Our results provide a general framework for how cells sense spatial and physical information at the nanoscale, precisely tuning the range of conditions at which they form adhesions and activate transcriptional regulation.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2018

Control of Mechanotransduction by Molecular Clutch Dynamics

Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Xavier Trepat; Pere Roca-Cusachs

The linkage of cells to their microenvironment is mediated by a series of bonds that dynamically engage and disengage, in what has been conceptualized as the molecular clutch model. Whereas this model has long been employed to describe actin cytoskeleton and cell migration dynamics, it has recently been proposed to also explain mechanotransduction (i.e., the process by which cells convert mechanical signals from their environment into biochemical signals). Here we review the current understanding on how cell dynamics and mechanotransduction are driven by molecular clutch dynamics and its master regulator, the force loading rate. Throughout this Review, we place a specific emphasis on the quantitative prediction of cell response enabled by combined experimental and theoretical approaches.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2017

Binding of ZO-1 to α5β1 integrins regulates the mechanical properties of α5β1–fibronectin links

Víctor González-Tarragó; Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Elsa Bazellières; Roger Oria; Carlos Pérez-González; Pere Roca-Cusachs

Interaction between tight junction protein ZO-1 and integrin α5β1 reduces the resistance to force of α5β1–fibronectin bonds while simultaneously increasing their affinity. This effect is specific to subconfluent cells in which ZO-1 is displaced from its normal localization in cell–cell junctions.


Oncotarget | 2017

NatB-mediated protein N-α-terminal acetylation is a potential therapeutic target in hepatocellular carcinoma

Leire Neri; Marta Lasa; Alberto Elosegui-Artola; Delia D'Avola; Beatriz Carte; Cristina Gazquez; Sara Alve; Pere Roca-Cusachs; Mercedes Iñarrairaegui; José Ignacio Herrero; Jesús Prieto; Bruno Sangro; Rafael Aldabe

The identification of new targets for systemic therapy of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is an urgent medical need. Recently, we showed that hNatB catalyzes the N-α-terminal acetylation of 15% of the human proteome and that this action is necessary for proper actin cytoskeleton structure and function. In tumors, cytoskeletal changes influence motility, invasion, survival, cell growth and tumor progression, making the cytoskeleton a very attractive antitumor target. Here, we show that hNatB subunits are upregulated in in over 59% HCC tumors compared to non-tumor tissue and that this upregulation is associated with microscopic vascular invasion. We found that hNatB silencing blocks proliferation and tumor formation in HCC cell lines in association with hampered DNA synthesis and impaired progression through the S and the G2/M phases. Growth inhibition is mediated by the degradation of two hNatB substrates, tropomyosin and CDK2, which occurs when these proteins lack N-α-terminal acetylation. In addition, hNatB inhibition disrupts the actin cytoskeleton, focal adhesions and tight/adherens junctions, abrogating two proliferative signaling pathways, Hippo/YAP and ERK1/2. Therefore, inhibition of NatB activity represents an interesting new approach to treating HCC by blocking cell proliferation and disrupting actin cytoskeleton function.

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Roger Oria

University of Barcelona

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Miguel A. del Pozo

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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