4.7 Article

Picking winners in cell-cell collisions: Wetting, speed, and contact

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 106, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.106.054413

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R35GM142847]
  2. NSF [PHY 1915491]

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This study investigates the outcome of cell collisions and finds that the speed and contact angle of cells have an impact on the result. Cells with higher speed and smaller contact angle are more likely to maintain their direction upon collision. Two different models are proposed to explain the cell-cell interactions and both are consistent with experimental results. The models can be distinguished by varying the cell contact angle and speed through orthogonal perturbations.
Groups of eukaryotic cells can coordinate their crawling motion to follow cues more effectively, stay together, or invade new areas. This collective cell migration depends on cell-cell interactions, which are often studied by colliding pairs of cells together. Can the outcome of these collisions be predicted? Recent experiments on trains of colliding epithelial cells suggest that cells with a smaller contact angle to the surface or larger speeds are more likely to maintain their direction (win) upon collision. When should we expect shape or speed to correlate with the outcome of a collision? To investigate this question, we build a model for two-cell collisions within the phase field framework, which allows for cell shape changes. We can reproduce the observation that cells with high speed and small contact angles are more likely to win with two different assumptions for how cells interact: (1) velocity aligning, in which we hypothesize that cells sense their own velocity and align to it over a finite timescale, and (2) front-front contact repolarization, where cells polarize away from cell-cell contact, akin to contact inhibition of locomotion. Surprisingly, though we simulate collisions between cells with widely varying properties, in each case, the probability of a cell winning is completely captured by a single summary variable: its relative speed (in the velocity-aligning model) or its relative contact angle (in the contact repolarization model). Both models are currently consistent with reported experimental results, but they can be distinguished by varying cell contact angle and speed through orthogonal perturbations.

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