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Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration

The ability of cells to coordinately migrate in groups is crucial to enable them to travel long distances during embryonic development, wound healing and tumorigenesis, but the fundamental mechanisms underlying intercellular coordination during collective cell migration remain elusive despite consid...

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Autores principales: Zaritsky, Assaf, Kaplan, Doron, Hecht, Inbal, Natan, Sari, Wolf, Lior, Gov, Nir S., Ben-Jacob, Eshel, Tsarfaty, Ilan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4109844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25058592
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003747
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author Zaritsky, Assaf
Kaplan, Doron
Hecht, Inbal
Natan, Sari
Wolf, Lior
Gov, Nir S.
Ben-Jacob, Eshel
Tsarfaty, Ilan
author_facet Zaritsky, Assaf
Kaplan, Doron
Hecht, Inbal
Natan, Sari
Wolf, Lior
Gov, Nir S.
Ben-Jacob, Eshel
Tsarfaty, Ilan
author_sort Zaritsky, Assaf
collection PubMed
description The ability of cells to coordinately migrate in groups is crucial to enable them to travel long distances during embryonic development, wound healing and tumorigenesis, but the fundamental mechanisms underlying intercellular coordination during collective cell migration remain elusive despite considerable research efforts. A novel analytical framework is introduced here to explicitly detect and quantify cell clusters that move coordinately in a monolayer. The analysis combines and associates vast amount of spatiotemporal data across multiple experiments into transparent quantitative measures to report the emergence of new modes of organized behavior during collective migration of tumor and epithelial cells in wound healing assays. First, we discovered the emergence of a wave of coordinated migration propagating backward from the wound front, which reflects formation of clusters of coordinately migrating cells that are generated further away from the wound edge and disintegrate close to the advancing front. This wave emerges in both normal and tumor cells, and is amplified by Met activation with hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor. Second, Met activation was found to induce coinciding waves of cellular acceleration and stretching, which in turn trigger the emergence of a backward propagating wave of directional migration with about an hour phase lag. Assessments of the relations between the waves revealed that amplified coordinated migration is associated with the emergence of directional migration. Taken together, our data and simplified modeling-based assessments suggest that increased velocity leads to enhanced coordination: higher motility arises due to acceleration and stretching that seems to increase directionality by temporarily diminishing the velocity components orthogonal to the direction defined by the monolayer geometry. Spatial and temporal accumulation of directionality thus defines coordination. The findings offer new insight and suggest a basic cellular mechanism for long-term cell guidance and intercellular communication during collective cell migration.
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spelling pubmed-41098442014-07-29 Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration Zaritsky, Assaf Kaplan, Doron Hecht, Inbal Natan, Sari Wolf, Lior Gov, Nir S. Ben-Jacob, Eshel Tsarfaty, Ilan PLoS Comput Biol Research Article The ability of cells to coordinately migrate in groups is crucial to enable them to travel long distances during embryonic development, wound healing and tumorigenesis, but the fundamental mechanisms underlying intercellular coordination during collective cell migration remain elusive despite considerable research efforts. A novel analytical framework is introduced here to explicitly detect and quantify cell clusters that move coordinately in a monolayer. The analysis combines and associates vast amount of spatiotemporal data across multiple experiments into transparent quantitative measures to report the emergence of new modes of organized behavior during collective migration of tumor and epithelial cells in wound healing assays. First, we discovered the emergence of a wave of coordinated migration propagating backward from the wound front, which reflects formation of clusters of coordinately migrating cells that are generated further away from the wound edge and disintegrate close to the advancing front. This wave emerges in both normal and tumor cells, and is amplified by Met activation with hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor. Second, Met activation was found to induce coinciding waves of cellular acceleration and stretching, which in turn trigger the emergence of a backward propagating wave of directional migration with about an hour phase lag. Assessments of the relations between the waves revealed that amplified coordinated migration is associated with the emergence of directional migration. Taken together, our data and simplified modeling-based assessments suggest that increased velocity leads to enhanced coordination: higher motility arises due to acceleration and stretching that seems to increase directionality by temporarily diminishing the velocity components orthogonal to the direction defined by the monolayer geometry. Spatial and temporal accumulation of directionality thus defines coordination. The findings offer new insight and suggest a basic cellular mechanism for long-term cell guidance and intercellular communication during collective cell migration. Public Library of Science 2014-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4109844/ /pubmed/25058592 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003747 Text en © 2014 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
Kaplan, Doron
Hecht, Inbal
Natan, Sari
Wolf, Lior
Gov, Nir S.
Ben-Jacob, Eshel
Tsarfaty, Ilan
Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration
title Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration
title_full Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration
title_fullStr Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration
title_full_unstemmed Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration
title_short Propagating Waves of Directionality and Coordination Orchestrate Collective Cell Migration
title_sort propagating waves of directionality and coordination orchestrate collective cell migration
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4109844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25058592
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003747
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