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1.
Sci Adv ; 9(49): eadh8152, 2023 12 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38055823

RESUMO

During vertebrate gastrulation, an embryo transforms from a layer of epithelial cells into a multilayered gastrula. This process requires the coordinated movements of hundreds to tens of thousands of cells, depending on the organism. In the chick embryo, patterns of actomyosin cables spanning several cells drive coordinated tissue flows. Here, we derive a minimal theoretical framework that couples actomyosin activity to global tissue flows. Our model predicts the onset and development of gastrulation flows in normal and experimentally perturbed chick embryos, mimicking different gastrulation modes as an active stress instability. Varying initial conditions and a parameter associated with active cell ingression, our model recapitulates distinct vertebrate gastrulation morphologies, consistent with recently published experiments in the chick embryo. Altogether, our results show how changes in the patterning of critical cell behaviors associated with different force-generating mechanisms contribute to distinct vertebrate gastrulation modes via a self-organizing mechanochemical process.


Assuntos
Actomiosina , Gastrulação , Animais , Embrião de Galinha , Gástrula , Vertebrados
2.
Development ; 150(7)2023 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37067451

RESUMO

During gastrulation, early embryos specify and reorganise the topology of their germ layers. Surprisingly, this fundamental and early process does not appear to be rigidly constrained by evolutionary pressures; instead, the morphology of gastrulation is highly variable throughout the animal kingdom. Recent experimental results demonstrate that it is possible to generate different alternative gastrulation modes in single organisms, such as in early cnidarian, arthropod and vertebrate embryos. Here, we review the mechanisms that underlie the plasticity of vertebrate gastrulation both when experimentally manipulated and during evolution. Using the insights obtained from these experiments we discuss the effects of the increase in yolk volume on the morphology of gastrulation and provide new insights into two crucial innovations during amniote gastrulation: the transition from a ring-shaped mesoderm domain in anamniotes to a crescent-shaped domain in amniotes, and the evolution of the reptilian blastoporal plate/canal into the avian primitive streak.


Assuntos
Gástrula , Gastrulação , Animais , Mesoderma , Camadas Germinativas , Linha Primitiva
3.
Elife ; 122023 04 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37039463

RESUMO

Convergence-extension in embryos is controlled by chemical and mechanical signalling. A key cellular process is the exchange of neighbours via T1 transitions. We propose and analyse a model with positive feedback between recruitment of myosin motors and mechanical tension in cell junctions. The model produces active T1 events, which act to elongate the tissue perpendicular to the main direction of tissue stress. Using an idealised tissue patch comprising several active cells embedded in a matrix of passive hexagonal cells, we identified an optimal range of mechanical stresses to trigger an active T1 event. We show that directed stresses also generate tension chains in a realistic patch made entirely of active cells of random shapes and leads to convergence-extension over a range of parameters. Our findings show that active intercalations can generate stress that activates T1 events in neighbouring cells, resulting in tension-dependent tissue reorganisation, in qualitative agreement with experiments on gastrulation in chick embryos.


Assuntos
Gastrulação , Mecanotransdução Celular , Animais , Embrião de Galinha , Retroalimentação , Gastrulação/fisiologia , Morfogênese , Junções Intercelulares
4.
Sci Adv ; 9(1): eabn5429, 2023 Jan 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36598979

RESUMO

The morphology of gastrulation driving the internalization of the mesoderm and endoderm differs markedly among vertebrate species. It ranges from involution of epithelial sheets of cells through a circular blastopore in amphibians to ingression of mesenchymal cells through a primitive streak in amniotes. By targeting signaling pathways controlling critical cell behaviors in the chick embryo, we generated crescent- and ring-shaped mesendoderm territories in which cells can or cannot ingress. These alterations subvert the formation of the chick primitive streak into the gastrulation modes seen in amphibians, reptiles, and teleost fish. Our experimental manipulations are supported by a theoretical framework linking cellular behaviors to self-organized multicellular flows outlined in detail in the accompanying paper. Together, this suggests that the evolution of gastrulation movements is largely determined by changes in a few critical cell behaviors in the mesendoderm territory across different species and controlled by a relatively small number of signaling pathways.

5.
Cells ; 10(11)2021 11 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34831258

RESUMO

The social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum provides an excellent model for research across a broad range of disciplines within biology. The organism diverged from the plant, yeast, fungi and animal kingdoms around 1 billion years ago but retains common aspects found in these kingdoms. Dictyostelium has a low level of genetic complexity and provides a range of molecular, cellular, biochemical and developmental biology experimental techniques, enabling multidisciplinary studies to be carried out in a wide range of areas, leading to research breakthroughs. Numerous laboratories within the United Kingdom employ Dictyostelium as their core research model. This review introduces Dictyostelium and then highlights research from several leading British research laboratories, covering their distinct areas of research, the benefits of using the model, and the breakthroughs that have arisen due to the use of Dictyostelium as a tractable model system.


Assuntos
Biologia , Dictyostelium/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Pesquisa , Animais , Dictyostelium/citologia , Descoberta de Drogas , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , Reino Unido
6.
Commun Integr Biol ; 14(1): 5-14, 2021 Jan 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33552382

RESUMO

Migratory environments of various eukaryotic cells, such as amoeba, leukocytes and cancer cells, typically involve spatial confinement. Numerous studies have recently emerged, aimed to develop experimental platforms that better recapitulate the characteristics of the cellular microenvironment. Using microfluidic technologies, we show that increasing confinement of Dictyostelium discoideum cells into narrower micro-channels resulted in a significant change in the mode of migration and associated arrangement of the actomyosin cytoskeleton. We observed that cells tended to migrate at constant speed, the magnitude of which was dependent on the size of the channels, as was the locomotory strategy adopted by each cell. Two different migration modes were observed, pseudopod-based and bleb-based migration, with bleb based migration being more frequent with increasing confinement and leading to slower migration. Beside the migration mode, we found that the major determinants of cell speed are its protrusion rate, the amount of F-actin at its leading edge and the number of actin foci. Our results highlighted the impact of the microenvironments on cell behavior. Furthermore, we developed a novel quantitative movement analysis platform for mono-dimensional cell migration that allows for standardization and simplification of the experimental conditions and aids investigation of the complex and dynamic processes occurring at the single-cell level.

7.
Curr Biol ; 30(23): R1436-R1438, 2020 12 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33290714

RESUMO

How signals coordinate and direct chemotaxis is an issue that is actively investigated. A new study shows how the dynamic alteration of chemoattractant flux by chemotaxing cells provides an efficient way to solve complex navigational tasks, including finding the optimal path through a complex maze.


Assuntos
Fatores Quimiotáticos , Quimiotaxia
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(41): 25553-25559, 2020 10 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32999070

RESUMO

Neutrophils and dendritic cells when migrating in confined environments have been shown to actuate a directional choice toward paths of least hydraulic resistance (barotaxis), in some cases overriding chemotactic responses. Here, we investigate whether this barotactic response is conserved in the more primitive model organism Dictyostelium discoideum using a microfluidic chip design. This design allowed us to monitor the behavior of single cells via live imaging when confronted with bifurcating microchannels, presenting different combinations of hydraulic and chemical stimuli. Under the conditions employed we find no evidence in support of a barotactic response; the cells base their directional choices on the chemotactic cues. When the cells are confronted by a microchannel bifurcation, they often split their leading edge and start moving into both channels, before a decision is made to move into one and retract from the other channel. Analysis of this decision-making process has shown that cells in steeper nonhydrolyzable adenosine- 3', 5'- cyclic monophosphorothioate, Sp- isomer (cAMPS) gradients move faster and split more readily. Furthermore, there exists a highly significant strong correlation between the velocity of the pseudopod moving up the cAMPS gradient to the total velocity of the pseudopods moving up and down the gradient over a large range of velocities. This suggests a role for a critical cortical tension gradient in the directional decision-making process.


Assuntos
Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Tomada de Decisões/fisiologia , Dictyostelium/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Resposta Táctica/fisiologia , Quimiotaxia/fisiologia , Desenho de Equipamento , Técnicas Analíticas Microfluídicas , Pressão , Análise de Célula Única
9.
Mech Dev ; 163: 103624, 2020 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32562871

RESUMO

Gastrulation consists in the dramatic reorganisation of the epiblast, a one-cell thick epithelial sheet, into a multilayered embryo. In chick, the formation of the internal layers requires the generation of a macroscopic convection-like flow, which involves up to 50,000 epithelial cells in the epiblast. These cell movements locate the mesendoderm precursors into the midline of the epiblast to form the primitive streak. There they acquire a mesenchymal phenotype, ingress into the embryo and migrate outward to populate the inner embryonic layers. This review covers what is currently understood about how cell behaviours ultimately cause these morphogenetic events and how they are regulated. We discuss 1) how the biochemical patterning of the embryo before gastrulation creates compartments of differential cell behaviours, 2) how the global epithelial flows arise from the coordinated actions of individual cells, 3) how the cells delaminate individually from the epiblast during the ingression, and 4) how cells move after the ingression following stereotypical migration routes. We conclude by exploring new technical advances that will facilitate future research in the chick model system.


Assuntos
Gástrula/embriologia , Gastrulação/genética , Camadas Germinativas/embriologia , Morfogênese/genética , Animais , Embrião de Galinha , Galinhas/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Gástrula/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Camadas Germinativas/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Mesoderma/embriologia
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(21): 11444-11449, 2020 05 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32381735

RESUMO

Morphogenetic flows in developmental biology are characterized by the coordinated motion of thousands of cells that organize into tissues, naturally raising the question of how this collective organization arises. Using only the kinematics of tissue deformation, which naturally integrates local and global mechanisms along cell paths, we identify the dynamic morphoskeletons behind morphogenesis, i.e., the evolving centerpieces of multicellular trajectory patterns. These features are model- and parameter-free, frame-invariant, and robust to measurement errors and can be computed from unfiltered cell-velocity data. We reveal the spatial attractors and repellers of the embryo by quantifying its Lagrangian deformation, information that is inaccessible to simple trajectory inspection or Eulerian methods that are local and typically frame-dependent. Computing these dynamic morphoskeletons in wild-type and mutant chick and fly embryos, we find that they capture the early footprint of known morphogenetic features, reveal new ones, and quantitatively distinguish between different phenotypes.


Assuntos
Embrião de Galinha/citologia , Embrião de Galinha/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Drosophila melanogaster/embriologia , Modelos Biológicos , Animais , Animais Geneticamente Modificados , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Embrião de Galinha/efeitos dos fármacos , Simulação por Computador , Proteínas de Drosophila/genética , Embrião não Mamífero/citologia , Fatores de Crescimento de Fibroblastos/antagonistas & inibidores , Fatores de Crescimento de Fibroblastos/metabolismo , Gástrula/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/genética , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/metabolismo , Indazóis/farmacologia , Microscopia/métodos , Morfogênese , Mutação , Proteína 1 Relacionada a Twist/genética
11.
Development ; 147(3)2020 02 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31964776

RESUMO

Directional cell intercalations of epithelial cells during gastrulation has, in several organisms, been shown to be associated with a planar cell polarity in the organisation of the actin-myosin cytoskeleton and is postulated to reflect directional tension that drives oriented cell intercalations. We have characterised and applied a recently introduced non-destructive optical manipulation technique to measure the tension in individual epithelial cell junctions of cells in various locations and orientations in the epiblast of chick embryos in the early stages of primitive streak formation. Junctional tension of mesendoderm precursors in the epiblast is higher in junctions oriented in the direction of intercalation than in junctions oriented perpendicular to the direction of intercalation and higher than in junctions of other cells in the epiblast. The kinetic data fit best with a simple viscoelastic Maxwell model, and we find that junctional tension, and to a lesser extent viscoelastic relaxation time, are dependent on myosin activity.


Assuntos
Células Epiteliais/metabolismo , Gastrulação/fisiologia , Junções Intercelulares/metabolismo , Pinças Ópticas , Linha Primitiva/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Animais , Animais Geneticamente Modificados , Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Polaridade Celular/fisiologia , Embrião de Galinha , Gástrula/metabolismo , Camadas Germinativas/metabolismo , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/genética , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/metabolismo , Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/farmacologia , Microscopia de Fluorescência/métodos , Miosina Tipo I/antagonistas & inibidores , Miosina Tipo I/metabolismo , Miosina Tipo II/antagonistas & inibidores , Miosina Tipo II/metabolismo , Pirróis/farmacologia , Transdução de Sinais/fisiologia
12.
Commun Biol ; 2: 139, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31044164

RESUMO

Propagating waves of cAMP, periodically initiated in the aggregation centre, are known to guide the chemotactic aggregation of hundreds of thousands of starving individual Dictyostelium discoideum cells into multicellular aggregates. Propagating optical density waves, reflecting cell periodic movement, have previously been shown to exist in streaming aggregates, mounds and migrating slugs. Using a highly sensitive cAMP-FRET reporter, we have now been able to measure periodically propagating cAMP waves directly in these multicellular structures. In slugs cAMP waves are periodically initiated in the tip and propagate backward through the prespore zone. Altered cAMP signalling dynamics in mutants with developmental defects strongly support a key functional role for cAMP waves in multicellular Dictyostelium morphogenesis. These findings thus show that propagating cAMP not only control the initial aggregation process but continue to be the long range cell-cell communication mechanism guiding cell movement during multicellular Dictyostelium morphogenesis at the mound and slugs stages.


Assuntos
AMP Cíclico/fisiologia , Dictyostelium/fisiologia , Sistemas do Segundo Mensageiro/fisiologia , 3',5'-AMP Cíclico Fosfodiesterases/deficiência , 3',5'-AMP Cíclico Fosfodiesterases/genética , 3',5'-AMP Cíclico Fosfodiesterases/fisiologia , Relógios Biológicos , Quimiotaxia , Dictyostelium/citologia , Dictyostelium/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Transferência Ressonante de Energia de Fluorescência , Genes Reporter , Fatores de Troca do Nucleotídeo Guanina/genética , Fatores de Troca do Nucleotídeo Guanina/fisiologia , Microscopia Confocal , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Morfogênese , Proteínas de Protozoários/genética , Proteínas de Protozoários/fisiologia , Frações Subcelulares/química
13.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 13(6): e1005569, 2017 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28665934

RESUMO

We introduce an Active Vertex Model (AVM) for cell-resolution studies of the mechanics of confluent epithelial tissues consisting of tens of thousands of cells, with a level of detail inaccessible to similar methods. The AVM combines the Vertex Model for confluent epithelial tissues with active matter dynamics. This introduces a natural description of the cell motion and accounts for motion patterns observed on multiple scales. Furthermore, cell contacts are generated dynamically from positions of cell centres. This not only enables efficient numerical implementation, but provides a natural description of the T1 transition events responsible for local tissue rearrangements. The AVM also includes cell alignment, cell-specific mechanical properties, cell growth, division and apoptosis. In addition, the AVM introduces a flexible, dynamically changing boundary of the epithelial sheet allowing for studies of phenomena such as the fingering instability or wound healing. We illustrate these capabilities with a number of case studies.


Assuntos
Comunicação Celular/fisiologia , Células Epiteliais/citologia , Células Epiteliais/fisiologia , Epitélio/fisiologia , Mecanotransdução Celular/fisiologia , Modelos Biológicos , Animais , Apoptose/fisiologia , Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Proliferação de Células/fisiologia , Simulação por Computador , Módulo de Elasticidade/fisiologia , Humanos , Mitose/fisiologia , Morfogênese/fisiologia , Tamanho do Órgão/fisiologia , Estresse Mecânico , Cicatrização/fisiologia
14.
Interface Focus ; 6(5): 20160047, 2016 Oct 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27708767

RESUMO

Movement of cells and tissues is a basic biological process that is used in development, wound repair, the immune response to bacterial invasion, tumour formation and metastasis, and the search for food and mates. While some cell movement is random, directed movement stimulated by extracellular signals is our focus here. This involves a sequence of steps in which cells first detect extracellular chemical and/or mechanical signals via membrane receptors that activate signal transduction cascades and produce intracellular signals. These intracellular signals control the motile machinery of the cell and thereby determine the spatial localization of the sites of force generation needed to produce directed motion. Understanding how force generation within cells and mechanical interactions with their surroundings, including other cells, are controlled in space and time to produce cell-level movement is a major challenge, and involves many issues that are amenable to mathematical modelling.

15.
Nat Commun ; 7: 12085, 2016 06 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27357338

RESUMO

The evolution of multicellularity enabled specialization of cells, but required novel signalling mechanisms for regulating cell differentiation. Early multicellular organisms are mostly extinct and the origins of these mechanisms are unknown. Here using comparative genome and transcriptome analysis across eight uni- and multicellular amoebozoan genomes, we find that 80% of proteins essential for the development of multicellular Dictyostelia are already present in their unicellular relatives. This set is enriched in cytosolic and nuclear proteins, and protein kinases. The remaining 20%, unique to Dictyostelia, mostly consists of extracellularly exposed and secreted proteins, with roles in sensing and recognition, while several genes for synthesis of signals that induce cell-type specialization were acquired by lateral gene transfer. Across Dictyostelia, changes in gene expression correspond more strongly with phenotypic innovation than changes in protein functional domains. We conclude that the transition to multicellularity required novel signals and sensors rather than novel signal processing mechanisms.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Dictyostelium/genética , Genes Essenciais , Diferenciação Celular/genética , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Sequenciamento Completo do Genoma
16.
Nat Cell Biol ; 17(4): 397-408, 2015 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25812521

RESUMO

Primitive streak formation in the chick embryo involves large-scale highly coordinated flows of more than 100,000 cells in the epiblast. These large-scale tissue flows and deformations can be correlated with specific anisotropic cell behaviours in the forming mesendoderm through a combination of light-sheet microscopy and computational analysis. Relevant behaviours include apical contraction, elongation along the apical-basal axis followed by ingression, and asynchronous directional cell intercalation of small groups of mesendoderm cells. Cell intercalation is associated with sequential, directional contraction of apical junctions, the onset, localization and direction of which correlate strongly with the appearance of active myosin II cables in aligned apical junctions in neighbouring cells. Use of class specific myosin inhibitors and gene-specific knockdown shows that apical contraction and intercalation are myosin II dependent and also reveal critical roles for myosin I and myosin V family members in the assembly of junctional myosin II cables.


Assuntos
Forma Celular/fisiologia , Miosina Tipo II/metabolismo , Miosina Tipo I/metabolismo , Miosina Tipo V/metabolismo , Linha Primitiva/embriologia , Animais , Animais Geneticamente Modificados , Linhagem Celular , Movimento Celular , Proliferação de Células , Embrião de Galinha , Galinhas , Gastrulação/fisiologia , Células HEK293 , Compostos Heterocíclicos de 4 ou mais Anéis/farmacologia , Humanos , Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/farmacologia , Miosina Tipo I/antagonistas & inibidores , Miosina Tipo I/genética , Miosina Tipo II/antagonistas & inibidores , Miosina Tipo II/genética , Miosina Tipo V/antagonistas & inibidores , Miosina Tipo V/genética , Fosforilação , Linha Primitiva/citologia , Pirróis/farmacologia , Interferência de RNA , RNA Interferente Pequeno
17.
Nat Commun ; 5: 3319, 2014 Feb 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24569529

RESUMO

Cytoskeletal dynamics during cell behaviours ranging from endocytosis and exocytosis to cell division and movement is controlled by a complex network of signalling pathways, the full details of which are as yet unresolved. Here we show that SILAC-based proteomic methods can be used to characterize the rapid chemoattractant-induced dynamic changes in the actin-myosin cytoskeleton and regulatory elements on a proteome-wide scale with a second to minute timescale resolution. This approach provides novel insights in the ensemble kinetics of key cytoskeletal constituents and association of known and novel identified binding proteins. We validate the proteomic data by detailed microscopy-based analysis of in vivo translocation dynamics for key signalling factors. This rapid large-scale proteomic approach may be applied to other situations where highly dynamic changes in complex cellular compartments are expected to play a key role.


Assuntos
Fatores Quimiotáticos/farmacologia , Citoesqueleto/efeitos dos fármacos , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Proteômica/métodos , Aminoácidos/metabolismo , AMP Cíclico/farmacologia , Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/genética , Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Dictyostelium/citologia , Dictyostelium/genética , Técnicas de Inativação de Genes , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/genética , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/metabolismo , Marcação por Isótopo/métodos , Cinética , Espectrometria de Massas , Microscopia Confocal , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Mutação , Transporte Proteico/efeitos dos fármacos , Proteoma/genética , Proteoma/metabolismo , Proteínas de Protozoários/genética , Proteínas de Protozoários/metabolismo , Fatores de Tempo
18.
Curr Genomics ; 13(4): 267-77, 2012 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23204916

RESUMO

Gastrulation, the process that puts the three major germlayers, the ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm in their correct topological position in the developing embryo, is characterised by extensive highly organised collective cell migration of epithelial and mesenchymal cells. We discuss current knowledge and insights in the mechanisms controlling these cell behaviours during gastrulation in the chick embryo. We discuss several ideas that have been proposed to explain the observed large scale vortex movements of epithelial cells in the epiblast during formation of the primitive streak. We review current insights in the control and execution of the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) underlying the formation of the hypoblast and the ingression of the mesendoderm cells through the streak. We discuss the mechanisms by which the mesendoderm cells move, the nature and dynamics of the signals that guide these movements, as well as the interplay between signalling and movement that result in tissue patterning and morphogenesis. We argue that instructive cell-cell signaling and directed chemotactic movement responses to these signals are instrumental in the execution of all phases of gastrulation.

19.
Dis Model Mech ; 5(6): 940-7, 2012 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22563063

RESUMO

Nonsense mutations that result in the expression of truncated, N-terminal, fragments of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) tumour suppressor protein are found in most sporadic and some hereditary colorectal cancers. These mutations can cause tumorigenesis by eliminating ß-catenin-binding sites from APC, which leads to upregulation of ß-catenin and thereby results in the induction of oncogenes such as MYC. Here we show that, in three distinct experimental model systems, expression of an N-terminal fragment of APC (N-APC) results in loss of directionality, but not speed, of cell motility independently of changes in ß-catenin regulation. We developed a system to culture and fluorescently label live pieces of gut tissue to record high-resolution three-dimensional time-lapse movies of cells in situ. This revealed an unexpected complexity of normal gut cell migration, a key process in gut epithelial maintenance, with cells moving with spatial and temporal discontinuity. Quantitative comparison of gut tissue from wild-type mice and APC heterozygotes (APC(Min/+); multiple intestinal neoplasia model) demonstrated that cells in precancerous epithelia lack directional preference when moving along the crypt-villus axis. This effect was reproduced in diverse experimental systems: in developing chicken embryos, mesoderm cells expressing N-APC failed to migrate normally; in amoeboid Dictyostelium, which lack endogenous APC, expressing an N-APC fragment maintained cell motility, but the cells failed to perform directional chemotaxis; and multicellular Dictyostelium slug aggregates similarly failed to perform phototaxis. We propose that N-terminal fragments of APC represent a gain-of-function mutation that causes cells within tissue to fail to migrate directionally in response to relevant guidance cues. Consistent with this idea, crypts in histologically normal tissues of APC(Min/+) intestines are overpopulated with cells, suggesting that a lack of migration might cause cell accumulation in a precancerous state.


Assuntos
Proteína da Polipose Adenomatosa do Colo/química , Proteína da Polipose Adenomatosa do Colo/metabolismo , Movimento Celular , Transformação Celular Neoplásica/patologia , Genes Dominantes , Modelos Animais , Fragmentos de Peptídeos/metabolismo , Polipose Adenomatosa do Colo/patologia , Animais , Transformação Celular Neoplásica/metabolismo , Embrião de Galinha , Dictyostelium/citologia , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Enterócitos/metabolismo , Enterócitos/patologia , Feminino , Intestino Delgado/patologia , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Linha Primitiva/metabolismo , Linha Primitiva/patologia
20.
PLoS One ; 6(4): e18081, 2011 Apr 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21559520

RESUMO

Measurements on embryonic epithelial tissues in a diverse range of organisms have shown that the statistics of cell neighbor numbers are universal in tissues where cell proliferation is the primary cell activity. Highly simplified non-spatial models of proliferation are claimed to accurately reproduce these statistics. Using a systematic critical analysis, we show that non-spatial models are not capable of robustly describing the universal statistics observed in proliferating epithelia, indicating strong spatial correlations between cells. Furthermore we show that spatial simulations using the Subcellular Element Model are able to robustly reproduce the universal histogram. In addition these simulations are able to unify ostensibly divergent experimental data in the literature. We also analyze cell neighbor statistics in early stages of chick embryo development in which cell behaviors other than proliferation are important. We find from experimental observation that cell neighbor statistics in the primitive streak region, where cell motility and ingression are also important, show a much broader distribution. A non-spatial Markov process model provides excellent agreement with this broader histogram indicating that cells in the primitive streak may have significantly weaker spatial correlations. These findings show that cell neighbor statistics provide a potentially useful signature of collective cell behavior.


Assuntos
Epitélio/metabolismo , Algoritmos , Animais , Movimento Celular , Proliferação de Células , Embrião de Galinha , Galinhas , Simulação por Computador , Feminino , Gástrula/citologia , Cadeias de Markov , Modelos Estatísticos , Linha Primitiva/fisiologia
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