Synphilin-1 regulates mechanotransduction in rigidity sensing through interaction with zyxin

Seok Gi Kim, Jinyan Li, Ji Su Hwang, Muhammad Anwar Ul Hassan, Ye Eun Sim, Ju Yeon Lee, Jung Soon Mo, Myeong Ok Kim, Gwang Lee, Sungsu Park

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Synphilin-1 has been studied extensively in the context of Parkinson’s disease pathology. However, the biophysical functions of synphilin-1 remain unexplored. To investigate its novel functionalities herein, cellular traction force and rigidity sensing ability are analyzed based on synphilin-1 overexpression using elastomeric pillar arrays and substrates of varying stiffness. Molecular changes are analyzed using RNA sequencing-based transcriptomic and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry-based proteomic analyses. Results: Synphilin-1 overexpression reduces cell area, with a decline of local contraction on elastomeric pillar arrays. Cells overexpressing synphilin-1 exhibit an impaired ability to respond to substrate rigidity; however, synphilin-1 knockdown restores rigidity sensing abilities. Integrated omics analysis and in silico prediction corroborate the phenotypic alterations induced by synphilin-1 overexpression at a biophysical level. Zyxin emerges as a novel synphilin-1 binding protein, and synphilin-1 overexpression reduces the nuclear translocation of yes-associated protein. Conclusion: These findings provide novel insights into the biophysical functions of synphilin-1, suggesting a potential protective role to the altered extracellular matrix, which may be relevant to neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinson’s disease.

Original languageEnglish
Article number345
JournalJournal of Nanobiotechnology
Volume23
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Mechanobiology
  • Multi-omics
  • Rigidity sensing
  • Synphilin-1
  • Zyxin

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