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1.
Biophys J ; 113(7): 1613-1622, 2017 Oct 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28978451

RESUMO

Single, isolated epithelial cells move randomly; however, during wound healing, organism development, cancer metastasis, and many other multicellular phenomena, motile cells group into a collective and migrate persistently in a directed manner. Recent work has examined the physics and biochemistry that coordinates the motions of these groups of cells. Of late, two mechanisms have been touted as being crucial to the physics of these systems: leader cells and jamming. However, the actual importance of these to collective migration remains circumstantial. Fundamentally, collective behavior must arise from the actions of individual cells. Here, we show how biophysical activity of an isolated cell impacts collective dynamics in epithelial layers. Although many reports suggest that wound closure rates depend on isolated cell speed and/or leader cells, we find that these correlations are not universally true, nor do collective dynamics follow the trends suggested by models for jamming. Instead, our experimental data, when coupled with a mathematical model for collective migration, shows that intracellular contractile stress, isolated cell speed, and adhesion all play a substantial role in influencing epithelial dynamics, and that alterations in contraction and/or substrate adhesion can cause confluent epithelial monolayers to exhibit an increase in motility, a feature reminiscent of cancer metastasis. These results directly question the validity of wound-healing assays as a general means for measuring cell migration, and provide further insight into the salient physics of collective migration.


Assuntos
Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Células Epiteliais/fisiologia , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Adesão Celular , Simulação por Computador , Cães , Células Epiteliais/citologia , Espaço Intracelular/fisiologia , Células Madin Darby de Rim Canino , Microscopia , Modelos Biológicos , Cicatrização/fisiologia
2.
Biophys J ; 112(4): 746-754, 2017 Feb 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28256234

RESUMO

Borrelia burgdorferi, the spirochete that causes Lyme disease, is a tick-transmitted pathogen that requires motility to invade and colonize mammalian and tick hosts. These bacteria use a unique undulating flat-wave shape to penetrate and propel themselves through host tissues. Previous mathematical modeling has suggested that the morphology and motility of these spirochetes depends crucially on the flagellar/cell wall stiffness ratio. Here, we test this prediction using the antibiotic vancomycin to weaken the cell wall. We found that low to moderate doses of vancomycin (≤2.0 µg/mL for 24 h) produced small alterations in cell shape and that as the dose was increased, cell speed decreased. Vancomycin concentrations >1.0 µg/mL also inhibited cell growth and led to bleb formation on a fraction of the cells. To quantitatively assess how vancomycin affects cell stiffness, we used optical traps to bend unflagellated mutants of B. burgdorferi. We found that in the presence of vancomycin, cell wall stiffness gradually decreased over time, with a 40% reduction in the bending stiffness after 36 h. Under the same conditions, the swimming speed of wild-type B. burgdorferi slowed by ∼15%, with only marginal changes to cell morphology. Interestingly, our biophysical model for the swimming dynamics of B. burgdorferi suggested that cell speed should increase with decreasing cell stiffness. We show that this discrepancy can be resolved if the periplasmic volume decreases as the cell wall becomes softer. These results provide a testable hypothesis for how alterations of cell wall stiffness affect periplasmic volume regulation. Furthermore, since motility is crucial to the virulence of B. burgdorferi, the results suggest that sublethal doses of antibiotics could negatively impact spirochete survival by impeding their swim speed, thereby enabling their capture and elimination by phagocytes.


Assuntos
Antibacterianos/farmacologia , Borrelia burgdorferi/efeitos dos fármacos , Parede Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Doença de Lyme/microbiologia , Fenômenos Mecânicos/efeitos dos fármacos , Movimento/efeitos dos fármacos , Vancomicina/farmacologia , Fenômenos Biomecânicos/efeitos dos fármacos , Borrelia burgdorferi/citologia , Borrelia burgdorferi/metabolismo , Borrelia burgdorferi/fisiologia
3.
Biophys J ; 110(7): 1469-1475, 2016 Apr 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27074673

RESUMO

The application of flow visualization in biological systems is becoming increasingly common in studies ranging from intracellular transport to the movements of whole organisms. In cell biology, the standard method for measuring cell-scale flows and/or displacements has been particle image velocimetry (PIV); however, alternative methods exist, such as optical flow constraint. Here we review PIV and optical flow, focusing on the accuracy and efficiency of these methods in the context of cellular biophysics. Although optical flow is not as common, a relatively simple implementation of this method can outperform PIV and is easily augmented to extract additional biophysical/chemical information such as local vorticity or net polymerization rates from speckle microscopy.


Assuntos
Células/citologia , Imagem Molecular/métodos , Reologia/métodos , Animais , Movimento Celular , Fenômenos Ópticos
4.
Sci Adv ; 4(12): eaau0125, 2018 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30585288

RESUMO

Dense suspensions of swimming bacteria are living fluids, an archetype of active matter. For example, Bacillus subtilis confined within a disc-shaped region forms a persistent stable vortex that counterrotates at the periphery. Here, we examined Escherichia coli under similar confinement and found that these bacteria, instead, form microspin cycles: a single vortex that periodically reverses direction on time scales of seconds. Using experimental perturbations of the confinement geometry, medium viscosity, bacterial length, density, and chemotaxis pathway, we show that morphological alterations of the bacteria transition a stable vortex into a periodically reversing one. We develop a mathematical model based on single-cell biophysics that quantitatively recreates the dynamics of these vortices and predicts that density gradients power the reversals. Our results define how microbial physics drives the active behavior of dense bacterial suspensions and may allow one to engineer novel micromixers for biomedical and other microfluidic applications.


Assuntos
Fenômenos Fisiológicos Bacterianos , Modelos Teóricos , Algoritmos , Escherichia coli/fisiologia
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