Short-term molecular polarization of cells on symmetric and asymmetric micropatterns.

Soft Matter

Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60208, USA.

Published: July 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cells sense their physical environment, which is crucial for movements in development, immune responses, and cancer invasion.
  • The study investigates how cell shape and adhesion impact "front-rear" polarization, essential for migration, revealing that circular cells can show temporary asymmetry in actin and adhesion distribution despite their shape.
  • Tear-drop shaped cells display persistent asymmetry in focal adhesions but short-term polarization in actin, indicating that different shapes can help standardize studies on cell motility and develop diagnostic tools for cancer cells.

Article Abstract

The ability of cells to sense geometrical/physical constraints of local environment is important for cell movements during development, immune surveillance, and in cancer invasion. In this paper, we quantify "front-rear" polarization - the crucial step in initiating cell migration - based on cytoskeleton and substrate adhesion anisotropy in micropatterned cells of well-defined shapes. We then show that the general viewpoint that asymmetric cell shape is one of the defining characteristics of polarized cells is incomplete. Specifically, we demonstrate that cells on circular micropatterned islands can exhibit asymmetric distribution of both filamentous actin (f-actin) and focal adhesions (FAs) as well as directional, lamellipodial-like ruffling activity. This asymmetry, however, is transient and persists only for the period of several hours during which actin filaments and adhesion structures reorganize into symmetric peripheral arrangement. Cells on asymmetric tear-drop shape islands also display polarized f-actin and FAs, but polarization axes are oriented towards the wide end of the islands. Polarization of actin filaments on tear-drop islands is short-term, while focal adhesions remain asymmetrically distributed for long times. From a practical perspective, circular cells constitute a convenient experimental system, in which phenomena related to cell polarization are "decoupled" from the effects of cells' local curvature (constant along circular cell's perimeter), while asymmetric (tear-drop) micropatterned cells standardize the organization of motility machinery of polarized/ moving cells. Both systems may prove useful for the design of diagnostic tools with which to probe and quantify the motility/invasiveness status of cells from cancer patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3697907PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/B922647HDOI Listing

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