PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

Essential Role of Integrin-Linked Kinase in Keratinocyte Responses to Mechanical Strain

Rudkouskaya A, Ivanova I A, et al.

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

Western University, Children’s Health Research Institute

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study investigated how integrin-linked kinase (ILK), a focal-adhesion scaffold protein, regulates epidermal keratinocyte mechanotransduction in vivo and in vitro. Using mice with epidermis-restricted Ilk inactivation (ILK-KO), the authors found skin fragility with dermal–epidermal microblistering and disrupted hemidesmosomal/adhesion signaling (including discontinuous Collagen XVII at the dermal–epidermal junction and altered Rac1 immunoreactivity). A major mechanotransduction phenotype was reduced nuclear localization of the mechanosensitive transcriptional regulator YAP in ILK-KO epidermis versus controls. In primary keratinocyte cultures, cyclic bidirectional strain induced robust focal-adhesion remodeling, F-actin cytoskeletal reorganization (thick actin bundles/stress fibers), and strong YAP nuclear translocation in ILK+ cells, but these responses were markedly impaired in ILK-KO keratinocytes. Mechanical strain increased expression of canonical YAP target genes (Ctgf, Cyr61, Csf1) only in ILK+ cells. Finally, microarray profiling and RT-qPCR validation showed that cyclic strain induces a mechanosensitive miRNA program in ILK+ keratinocytes that is substantially altered/blunted by ILK loss. Collectively, the work positions ILK as a key upstream node linking integrin adhesion complexes to F-actin remodeling, YAP-dependent transcription, and strain-responsive miRNA regulation in epidermal keratinocytes—mechanisms relevant to skin homeostasis and wound repair.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture B1

Keratinocyte mechanical stimulation was performed using a CellScale MechanoCulture B1 device to deliver controlled equibiaxial (bidirectional) cyclic tensile strain to adherent primary keratinocyte monolayers cultured on clear silicone membranes. Silicone membranes were sequentially coated with rat-tail collagen I and laminin-332 matrix to support beta1-integrin-mediated attachment and basal-keratinocyte-like conditions. Forty-eight hours after seeding, one membrane per isolate was mounted into the MechanoCulture B1 and subjected to equibiaxial cyclic strain defined as a 20% change in radius at 0.1 Hz for 24 hours; a paired membrane from the same isolate was maintained as an unstretched static control. MechanoCulture B1–enabled strain was the central perturbation used to quantify ILK-dependent mechanotransduction outputs, including focal-adhesion remodeling (paxillin), F-actin reorganization (phalloidin), YAP nuclear translocation (immunofluorescence quantification), induction of YAP target genes (RT-qPCR of Ctgf/Cyr61/Csf1), and strain-responsive miRNA signatures (miRNA microarray plus RT-qPCR validation).
AUTHORS

Alena Rudkouskaya, Iordanka A. Ivanova, Samar Sayedyahossein, Lina Dagnino.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

Western University, Children’s Health Research Institute

COUNTRIES

Canada

INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture B1

TESTING METHODS

Tensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

MechanotransductionSkin and Wound Healing Biomechanics

Related Publications:

Instrument Used:
Year:
Testing Method:
Research Application:
Country:

Periodic thermomechanical modulation of toll-like receptor expression and distribution in mesenchymal stromal cells

Xu X, Nie Y, et al.

MRS Communications

MechanoCulture B1

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

MechanotransductionStem Cell Mechanobiology

2021

Hierarchical electrospun tendon-ligament bioinspired scaffolds induce changes in fibroblasts morphology under static and dynamic conditions

Sensini A, Cristofolini L, et al.

Journal of Microscopy

MechanoCulture B1

Hydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

MechanotransductionMusculoskeletal Tissue Engineering & MechanicsPolymers and Elastomers TestingScaffold Mechanical TestingTendon Tissue Engineering & Ligament Mechanics

2020

The mechano-response of murine annulus fibrosus cells to cyclic tensile strain is frequency dependent

Kim MKM, Burns MJ, et al.

JOR Spine

MechanoCulture B1

Biaxial TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingTensile Testing

Intervertebral Disc BiomechanicsMechanotransduction

2020

Contact Sales

Product of Interest: