Intrinsic versus extrinsic cellular decision making

ORAL

Abstract

A cell routinely responds to one of many competing environmental cues. Does the cell have an intrinsic preference for that cue, or does that cue have the highest extrinsic information content? We introduce a theoretical framework to answer this fundamental question. We derive extrinsic detection limits for four types of directional cues—external and self-generated chemical gradients, fluid flow, and contact inhibition of locomotion—and thus predict extrinsic decision boundaries when these cues compete as pairs. Comparing the boundaries to published data from cell migration experiments quantitatively determines the degree to which cell decisions are intrinsic vs. extrinsic, revealing the extent of cells' autonomy and providing interpretation of their response networks.

*L. G. and A. M. were supported by National Science Foundation Grants No. PHY-2118561 and No. MCB-2118037. B. H. was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants No. R01 CA254110, No. R33 HL159948, and No. U01 CA274304.

Publication: L. González, B. Han and A. Mugler, Intrinsic versus extrinsic cellular decision making. arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.12081 (2024)

Presenters

  • Louis Gonzalez

    • University of Pittsburgh

Authors

  • Louis Gonzalez

    • University of Pittsburgh
  • Bumsoo Han

    • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • Andrew Mugler

    • University of Pittsburgh