Cellular Polarization and Contractility in Collective Cell Migration

ORAL

Abstract

Collective cell migration drives many biological processes such as metastasis, morphogenesis and wound healing. These coordinated motions are driven by active forces. The physical nature of these forces and the mechanisms by which they generate collective cell migration are still not fully understood. We have developed a minimum physical model of a cell monolayer as an elastic continuum whose deformation field is coupled to two internal degrees of freedom: the concentration of a chemical signal, controlling cell contractility, and the polarization field controlling the direction of local cell motion. By combining theory with experiments, we show that these two internal variables account for the sloshing waves and the systematic deviations of the direction of cell polarization from that of local cell velocity observed in confined cell monolayers.

*KJCU and MCM were supported by the Simons Foundation.

Authors

  • Kazage J Christophe Utuje

    • Syracuse University
  • Jacob Notbohm

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Shiladitya Banerjee

    • University of Chicago
    • James Franck Institute, Univ of Chicago
  • Bomi Gweon

    • Hanyang University
  • Hwanseok Jang

    • Korea University
  • Yongdoo Park

    • Korea University
  • Jennifer Shin

    • KAIST
  • James P. Butler

    • Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  • Jeffrey J. Fredberg

    • Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
  • M. Cristina Marchetti

    • Syracuse Univ
    • Department of Physics, Syracuse University; Syracuse Biomaterials Institute, Syracuse University
    • Syracuse University
    • Department of Physics, Syracuse University