Polar pattern formation induced by contact following locomotion in a multicellular system

Elife. 2020 Apr 30:9:e53609. doi: 10.7554/eLife.53609.

Abstract

Biophysical mechanisms underlying collective cell migration of eukaryotic cells have been studied extensively in recent years. One mechanism that induces cells to correlate their motions is contact inhibition of locomotion, by which cells migrating away from the contact site. Here, we report that tail-following behavior at the contact site, termed contact following locomotion (CFL), can induce a non-trivial collective behavior in migrating cells. We show the emergence of a traveling band showing polar order in a mutant Dictyostelium cell that lacks chemotactic activity. We find that CFL is the cell-cell interaction underlying this phenomenon, enabling a theoretical description of how this traveling band forms. We further show that the polar order phase consists of subpopulations that exhibit characteristic transversal motions with respect to the direction of band propagation. These findings describe a novel mechanism of collective cell migration involving cell-cell interactions capable of inducing traveling band with polar order.

Keywords: cell migration; cell-cell contact; collective cell migration; dictyostelium; physics of living systems; self-propelled particles.

Plain language summary

The cells of animals and many other living things are able to migrate together in groups. This collective cell migration plays crucial roles in many processes in animals such as forming organs and limbs, and healing wounds. A soil-dwelling amoeba called Dictyostelium discoideum – or just Dicty for short – is commonly used as a model to study how groups of cells migrate collectively. Individual Dicty cells may live alone but sometimes many cells come together to form a larger mobile structure called a “slug”. Chemical signals coordinate how the cells collectively migrate to form the multicellular slug. Mutant Dicty cells that lack these chemical signal processes can still move together as a band that travels across a surface. This movement resembles a type of collective motion that has previously been observed in physics experiments using self-propelled particles. However, it remains unclear how this collective behavior works. Hayakawa et al. have now combined genetics, cell biology and computational approaches to study how groups of the mutant Dicty cells migrate together. The experiments showed that the traveling band is dynamically maintained by cells joining or leaving, and that this turnover is caused by simple interactions between the cells known as “contact following locomotion”. Contact following locomotion has been also reported in mammalian cells so the findings of Hayakawa et al. may aid research into how animals develop and how errors in cell migration may lead to diseases. Further studies are required to find out whether other cells showing contact following locomotion also travel in a band.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Video-Audio Media

MeSH terms

  • Cell Communication*
  • Cell Movement*
  • Contact Inhibition*
  • Dictyostelium / genetics
  • Dictyostelium / physiology*
  • Microscopy, Video
  • Models, Biological
  • Mutation
  • Single-Cell Analysis
  • Time Factors