4.8 Article

Chemotactic cell trapping in controlled alternating gradient fields

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1014853108

Keywords

eukaryotic chemotaxis; pseudopod-based motility; gradient sensing; flow chamber

Funding

  1. Statistical and Biological Physics Chair, E. Frey, at the Arnold Sommerfeld Center of Theoretical Physics at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat in Munich
  2. German Excellence Cluster Nanosystems Initiative Munich
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [HE 5958/2-1]
  4. Microsoft Research European PhD scholarship
  5. Volkswagen Foundation [I/85100]

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Directed cell migration toward spatio-temporally varying chemotactic stimuli requires rapid cytoskeletal reorganization. Numerous studies provide evidence that actin reorganization is controlled by intracellular redistribution of signaling molecules, such as the PI4,5P2/PI3,4,5P3 gradient. However, exploring underlying mechanisms is difficult and requires careful spatio-temporal control of external chemotactic stimuli. We designed a microfluidic setup to generate alternating chemotactic gradient fields for simultaneous multicell exposure, greatly facilitating statistical analysis. For a quantitative description of intracellular response dynamics, we apply alternating time sequences of spatially homogeneous concentration gradients across 300 mu m, reorienting on timescales down to a few seconds. Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae respond to gradient switching rates below 0.02 Hz by readapting their migration direction. For faster switching, cellular repolarization ceases and is completely stalled at 0.1 Hz. In this chemotactically trapped cell state, external stimuli alternate faster than intracellular feedback is capable to respond by onset of directed migration. To investigate intracellular actin cortex rearrangement during gradient switching, we correlate migratory cell response with actin repolymerization dynamics, quantified by a fluorescence distribution moment of the GFP fusion protein LimE Delta cc. We find two fundamentally different cell polarization types and we could reveal the role of PI3-Kinase for cellular repolarization. In the early aggregation phase, PI3-Kinase enhances the capability of D. discoideum cells to readjust their polarity in response to spatially alternating gradient fields, whereas in aggregation competent cells the effect of PI3-Kinase perturbation becomes less relevant.

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