Cell Surface Mechanochemistry and the Determinants of Bleb Formation, Healing, and Travel Velocity.

Biophys J

Department of Mathematics, Center for Complex Biological Systems, University of California, Irvine, California; Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Irvine, California. Electronic address:

Published: April 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Blebs are cell protrusions that play a role in various cellular functions like division and movement, especially in cancer cells.
  • Mathematical models in this study simulate the full life cycle of blebs over longer timescales, accounting for factors like myosin contractility and osmotic pressure.
  • The models predict under what conditions blebs move or stay still and describe how they expand, helping to deepen the understanding of membrane dynamics in cells.

Article Abstract

Blebs are pressure-driven cell protrusions implicated in cellular functions such as cell division, apoptosis, and cell motility, including motility of protease-inhibited cancer cells. Because of their mechanical nature, blebs inform us about general cell-surface mechanics, including membrane dynamics, pressure propagation throughout the cytoplasm, and the architecture and dynamics of the actin cortex. Mathematical models including detailed fluid dynamics have previously been used to understand bleb expansion. Here, we develop mathematical models in two and three dimensions on longer timescales that recapitulate the full bleb life cycle, including both expansion and healing by cortex reformation, in terms of experimentally accessible biophysical parameters such as myosin contractility, osmotic pressure, and turnover of actin and ezrin. The model provides conditions under which blebbing occurs, and naturally gives rise to traveling blebs. The model predicts conditions under which blebs travel or remain stationary, as well as the bleb traveling velocity, a quantity that has remained elusive in previous models. As previous studies have used blebs as reporters of membrane tension and pressure dynamics within the cell, we have used our system to investigate various pressure equilibration models and dynamic, nonuniform membrane tension to account for the shape of a traveling bleb. We also find that traveling blebs tend to expand in all directions unless otherwise constrained. One possible constraint could be provided by spatial heterogeneity in, for example, adhesion density.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4833840PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2016.03.008DOI Listing

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