Engineering Photoresponsive Ligand Tethers for Mechanical Regulation of Stem Cells.
                            
                                cyan
                            
                            
                                pdDronpa1
                            
                            
                                
                                    in vitro
                                
                            
                            
                                Control of cytoskeleton / cell motility / cell shape
                            
                                Cell differentiation
                            
                                Extracellular optogenetics
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                        
                        
                        
                        
                            Abstract:
                            Regulating stem cell functions by precisely controlling the nanoscale presentation of bioactive ligands has a substantial impact on tissue engineering and regenerative medicine but remains a major challenge. Here it is shown that bioactive ligands can become mechanically "invisible" by increasing their tether lengths to the substrate beyond a critical length, providing a way to regulate mechanotransduction without changing the biochemical conditions. Building on this finding, light switchable tethers are rationally designed, whose lengths can be modulated reversibly by switching a light-responsive protein, pdDronpa, in between monomer and dimer states. This allows the regulation of the adhesion, spreading, and differentiation of stem cells by light on substrates of well-defined biochemical and physical properties. Spatiotemporal regulation of differential cell fates on the same substrate is further demonstrated, which may represent an important step toward constructing complex organoids or mini tissues by spatially defining the mechanical cues of the cellular microenvironment with light.