4.5 Article

Seeds of Locally Aligned Motion and Stress Coordinate a Collective Cell Migration

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 109, Issue 12, Pages 2492-2500

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2015.11.001

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Funding

  1. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas [CPRIT R1225]
  2. National Institutes of Health [P01 GM103723]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [BFU2012-38146]
  4. Generalitat de Catalunya [2014-SGR-927]
  5. European Research Council [CoG-616480]
  6. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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We find how collective migration emerges from mechanical information transfer between cells. Local alignment of cell velocity and mechanical stress orientation-a phenomenon dubbed plithotaxis''-plays a crucial role in inducing coordinated migration. Leader cells at the monolayer edge better align velocity and stress to migrate faster toward the open space. Local seeds of enhanced motion then generate stress on neighboring cells to guide their migration. Stress-induced motion propagates into the monolayer as well as along the monolayer boundary to generate increasingly larger clusters of coordinately migrating cells that move faster with enhanced alignment of velocity and stress. Together, our analysis provides a model of long-range mechanical communication between cells, in which plithotaxis translates local mechanical fluctuations into globally collective migration of entire tissues.

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