Cell motility self-regulated by secreted footprints

ORAL

Abstract

Eukaryotic cell migration is essential to biological processes like embryonic development, immune response, wound healing, or cancer metastasis. During migration, there is a complex interplay between cells and their environment, as cells respond to environmental signals and actively alter their surroundings. Recent experiments observed that MDCK epithelial cells, when placed on 1D fibronectin micropatterned stripes, leave a footprint on the substrate that modifies their own motility, resulting in oscillatory motion. This talk will explore how footprint secretion affects cell motility patterns by combining mathematical modeling and experiments. We assume that cells secrete a footprint that activates signaling pathways that regulate cell polarity. The model reproduces the observed oscillatory motion and predicts new 2D motility patterns, which are experimentally verified. We show that minor changes in footprint interactions can cause cells to switch from confinement to complex exploratory dynamics. This study highlights the potential of cells to self-regulate their motility using footprints and provides insight into the mechanisms guiding cell migration.

* EPI and BAC are supported by NIH R35 GM142847. This work was carried out at the Advanced Research Computing at Hopkins (ARCH) core facility (rockfish.jhu.edu), which is supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) grant number OAC 1920103. This work was supported by LABEX Who Am I? (ANR-11-LABX-0071 to BL and JDA), the Ligue Contre le Cancer (Equipe labellisée 2019 to BL), the Agence Nationale de la Recherche ('POLCAM' ANR-17-CE13-0013, "Myofuse" ANR-19-CE13-0016), INCa 2018-1-PL BIO-08-ICR-1 (Decision N° 2018-154) and DIM Elicit "Région Ile-de-France". We acknowledge the ImagoSeine core facility of the IJM, member of IBiSA and France-BioImaging (ANR-10-INBS-04) infrastructures.

Publication: https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.09.14.557437

Presenters

  • Emiliano Perez Ipiña

    Department of Physics & Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD., Johns Hopkins University

Authors

  • Emiliano Perez Ipiña

    Department of Physics & Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD., Johns Hopkins University

  • Joseph d’Alessandro

    Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Institut Jacques Monod, F-75013 Paris, France

  • Benoît Ladoux

    Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Institut Jacques Monod, F-75013 Paris, France

  • Brian A Camley

    Johns Hopkins University, Department of Physics & Astronomy and Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.