4.8 Article

Collective cell durotaxis emerges from long-range intercellular force transmission

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 353, Issue 6304, Pages 1157-1161

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf7119

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [BFU2015-65074-P, BFU2011-23111, BFU2014-52586-REDT, DPI2015-64221-C2-1-R, DPI2013-43727-R, PI14/00280, RYC-2014-15559, BES-2013-063684, IJCI-2014-19156, IJCI-2014-19843]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2014-SGR-927]
  3. European Research Council [CoG-616480, StG 306571]
  4. Obra Social La Caixa, Marie-Curie Action [CAFFORCE 328664]
  5. EMBO Long-Term Fellowship [EMBO ALTF 1235-2012]
  6. Career Integration Grant within the seventh European Community Framework Programme [PCIG10-GA-2011-303848]
  7. Fundacio la Marato de TV3 [20133330]
  8. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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The ability of cells to follow gradients of extracellular matrix stiffness-durotaxis-has been implicated in development, fibrosis, and cancer. Here, we found multicellular clusters that exhibited durotaxis even if isolated constituent cells did not. This emergent mode of directed collective cell migration applied to a variety of epithelial cell types, required the action of myosin motors, and originated from supracellular transmission of contractile physical forces. To explain the observed phenomenology, we developed a generalized clutch model in which local stick-slip dynamics of cell-matrix adhesions was integrated to the tissue level through cell-cell junctions. Collective durotaxis is far more efficient than single-cell durotaxis; it thus emerges as a robust mechanism to direct cell migration during development, wound healing, and collective cancer cell invasion.

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