Chemotaxis and ~Actin Oscillations

ORAL

Abstract

Recently, self-oscillations of the cytoskeletal actin have been observed in Dictyostelium, a model system for studying chemotaxis. Here we report experimental results on the self-oscillation mechanism and the role of regulatory proteins and myosin II. We stimulate cells rapidly and periodically by using photo un-caging of the chemoattractant in a micro-fluidic device and measured the cellular responses. ~We found that the response amplitude grows with stimulation strength only in a very narrow region of stimulation, after which the response amplitude reaches a plateau. Moreover, the frequency-response is not constant but rather varies with the strength of external stimuli. To understand the underlying mechanism, we analyzed the polymerization and de-polymerization time in the single cell level. Despite of the large cell-to-cell variability, we found that the polymerization time is independent of external stimuli and the de-polymerization time is prolonged as the stimulation strength increases. Our conclusions will be summarized and the role of noise in the signaling network will be discussed. ~

*German Science Foundation CRC 937

Authors

  • Eberhard Bodenschatz

    • MPI Dynamics and Self-Organization
  • Hsin-Fang Hsu

    • MPI Dynamics and Self-Organization
  • Jose Negrete

    • MPI Physics of Complex Systems
  • Carsten Beta

    • MPI Dynamics and Self-Organization
  • Alain Pumir

    • ENS Lyon
  • Azam Gholami

    • Max-Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Goettingen, Germany
    • MPI Dynamics and Self-Organization
  • Marco Tarantola

    • MPI Dynamics and Self-Organization
  • Christian Westendorf

    • MPI Dynamics and Self-Organization
  • Vladimir Zykov

    • MPI Dynamics and Self-Organization