4.8 Article

Glass-like dynamics of collective cell migration

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1010059108

Keywords

active matter; cell mechanics; jamming; collective cell dynamics; nonequilibrium

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DMR-1006546]
  2. Harvard Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers (MRSEC) [DMR-0820484]
  3. University of Malaga (Junta de Andalucia) [P09-TEP-5369]
  4. European Research Council
  5. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
  6. Institucio Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avancats
  7. ICREA Funding Source: Custom
  8. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  9. Division Of Materials Research [820484] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Collective cell migration in tissues occurs throughout embryonic development, during wound healing, and in cancerous tumor invasion, yet most detailed knowledge of cell migration comes from single-cell studies. As single cells migrate, the shape of the cell body fluctuates dramatically through cyclic processes of extension, adhesion, and retraction, accompanied by erratic changes in migration direction. Within confluent cell layers, such subcellular motions must be coupled between neighbors, yet the influence of these subcellular motions on collective migration is not known. Here we study motion within a confluent epithelial cell sheet, simultaneously measuring collective migration and subcellular motions, covering a broad range of length scales, time scales, and cell densities. At large length scales and time scales collective migration slows as cell density rises, yet the fastest cells move in large, multicell groups whose scale grows with increasing cell density. This behavior has an intriguing analogy to dynamic heterogeneities found in particulate systems as they become more crowded and approach a glass transition. In addition we find a diminishing self-diffusivity of short-wavelength motions within the cell layer, and growing peaks in the vibrational density of states associated with cooperative cell-shape fluctuations. Both of these observations are also intriguingly reminiscent of a glass transition. Thus, these results provide a broad and suggestive analogy between cell motion within a confluent layer and the dynamics of supercooled colloidal and molecular fluids approaching a glass transition.

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