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Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility

Collective cell migration plays a major role in embryonic morphogenesis, tissue remodeling, wound repair and cancer invasion. Despite many decades of extensive investigations, only few analytical tools have been developed to enhance the biological understanding of this important phenomenon. Here we...

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Autores principales: Zaritsky, Assaf, Natan, Sari, Ben-Jacob, Eshel, Tsarfaty, Ilan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3435317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22970283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044671
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author Zaritsky, Assaf
Natan, Sari
Ben-Jacob, Eshel
Tsarfaty, Ilan
author_facet Zaritsky, Assaf
Natan, Sari
Ben-Jacob, Eshel
Tsarfaty, Ilan
author_sort Zaritsky, Assaf
collection PubMed
description Collective cell migration plays a major role in embryonic morphogenesis, tissue remodeling, wound repair and cancer invasion. Despite many decades of extensive investigations, only few analytical tools have been developed to enhance the biological understanding of this important phenomenon. Here we present a novel quantitative approach to analyze long term kinetics of bright field time-lapse wound healing. Fully-automated spatiotemporal measures and visualization of cells' motility and implicit morphology were proven to be sound, repetitive and highly informative compared to single-cell tracking analysis. We study cellular collective migration induced by tyrosine kinase-growth factor signaling (Met-Hepatocyte Growth Factor/Scatter Factor (HGF/SF)). Our quantitative approach is applied to demonstrate that collective migration of the adenocarcinoma cell lines is characterized by simple morpho-kinetics. HGF/SF induces complex morpho-kinetic coordinated collective migration: cells at the front move faster and are more spread than those further away from the wound edge. As the wound heals, distant cells gradually accelerate and enhance spread and elongation –resembling the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), and then the cells become more spread and maintain higher velocity than cells located closer to the wound. Finally, upon wound closure, front cells halt, shrink and round up (resembling mesenchymal to epithelial transition (MET) phenotype) while distant cells undergo the same process gradually. Met inhibition experiments further validate that Met signaling dramatically alters the morpho-kinetic dynamics of the healing wound. Machine-learning classification was applied to demonstrate the generalization of our findings, revealing even subtle changes in motility patterns induced by Met-inhibition. It is concluded that activation of Met-signaling induces an elaborated model in which cells lead a coordinated increased motility along with gradual differentiation-based collective cell motility dynamics. Our quantitative phenotypes may guide future investigation on the molecular and cellular mechanisms of tyrosine kinase-induced coordinate cell motility and morphogenesis in metastasis.
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spelling pubmed-34353172012-09-11 Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility Zaritsky, Assaf Natan, Sari Ben-Jacob, Eshel Tsarfaty, Ilan PLoS One Research Article Collective cell migration plays a major role in embryonic morphogenesis, tissue remodeling, wound repair and cancer invasion. Despite many decades of extensive investigations, only few analytical tools have been developed to enhance the biological understanding of this important phenomenon. Here we present a novel quantitative approach to analyze long term kinetics of bright field time-lapse wound healing. Fully-automated spatiotemporal measures and visualization of cells' motility and implicit morphology were proven to be sound, repetitive and highly informative compared to single-cell tracking analysis. We study cellular collective migration induced by tyrosine kinase-growth factor signaling (Met-Hepatocyte Growth Factor/Scatter Factor (HGF/SF)). Our quantitative approach is applied to demonstrate that collective migration of the adenocarcinoma cell lines is characterized by simple morpho-kinetics. HGF/SF induces complex morpho-kinetic coordinated collective migration: cells at the front move faster and are more spread than those further away from the wound edge. As the wound heals, distant cells gradually accelerate and enhance spread and elongation –resembling the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), and then the cells become more spread and maintain higher velocity than cells located closer to the wound. Finally, upon wound closure, front cells halt, shrink and round up (resembling mesenchymal to epithelial transition (MET) phenotype) while distant cells undergo the same process gradually. Met inhibition experiments further validate that Met signaling dramatically alters the morpho-kinetic dynamics of the healing wound. Machine-learning classification was applied to demonstrate the generalization of our findings, revealing even subtle changes in motility patterns induced by Met-inhibition. It is concluded that activation of Met-signaling induces an elaborated model in which cells lead a coordinated increased motility along with gradual differentiation-based collective cell motility dynamics. Our quantitative phenotypes may guide future investigation on the molecular and cellular mechanisms of tyrosine kinase-induced coordinate cell motility and morphogenesis in metastasis. Public Library of Science 2012-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3435317/ /pubmed/22970283 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044671 Text en © 2012 Zaritsky et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zaritsky, Assaf
Natan, Sari
Ben-Jacob, Eshel
Tsarfaty, Ilan
Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility
title Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility
title_full Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility
title_fullStr Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility
title_full_unstemmed Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility
title_short Emergence of HGF/SF-Induced Coordinated Cellular Motility
title_sort emergence of hgf/sf-induced coordinated cellular motility
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3435317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22970283
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044671
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