Migrasome formation is initiated preferentially in tubular junctions by membrane tension

Ben Zucker, Raviv Dharan, Dongju Wang, Li Yu*, Raya Sorkin*, Michael M. Kozlov*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Migrasomes, the vesicle-like membrane microstructures, arise on the retraction fibers (RFs), the branched nanotubules pulled out of cell plasma membranes during cell migration and shaped by membrane tension. Migrasomes form in two steps: a local RF bulging is followed by a protein-dependent stabilization of the emerging spherical bulge. Here, we addressed theoretically and experimentally the previously unexplored mechanism of bulging of membrane tubular systems. We assumed that the bulging could be driven by increases in membrane tension and experimentally verified this hypothesis in live-cell and biomimetic systems. We exposed RF-generating live cells to a hypotonic medium, which produced water flows into the cells and a related increase in the membrane tension. We observed the formation of migrasome-like bulges with a preferential location in the RF branching sites. Next, we developed a biomimetic system of three membrane tubules pulled out of a giant plasma membrane vesicle (GPMV), connected by a junction, and subjected to pulling forces controlled by the GPMV membrane tension. An abrupt increase in the GPMV tension resulted in the generation of migrasome-like bulges mainly in the junctions. To understand the physical forces behind these observations, we considered theoretically the mechanical energy of a membrane system consisting of a three-way tubular junction with emerging tubular arms subjected to membrane tension. Substantiating our experimental observations, the energy minimization predicted a tension increase to drive the formation of membrane bulges, preferably in the junction site, independently of the way of the tension application. We generalized the model to derive universal criteria of bulging in branched membrane tubules.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)604-619
Number of pages16
JournalBiophysical Journal
Volume124
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Feb 2025

Funding

FundersFunder number
European Research Council Executive Agency
European Commission
European Research Council101077502
National Natural Science Foundation of China32030023, 92354306, 92054301, 32330025
Tsinghua-Toyota Joint Research Fund20233930058
Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China2024YFF1502900, 2024YFA1307301
Tsinghua University20241080003
NSF-BSF2021793
Scientific and Technological Innovation Project of China Academy of Chinese Medical SciencesCI2023C024YL
Joseph Klafter Chair in Biophysics1289/20
Israel Science Foundation1994/22

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