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Collective migration during a gap closure in a two-dimensional haptotactic model

Authors :
UCL - SSH/IACS - Institute of Analysis of Change in Contemporary and Historical Societies
Versaevel, Marie
Alaimo, Laura
Seveau, Valentine
Luciano, Marine
Mohammed, Danahe
Bruyère, Céline
Vercruysse, Eléonore
Théodoly, Olivier
Gabriele, Sylvain
UCL - SSH/IACS - Institute of Analysis of Change in Contemporary and Historical Societies
Versaevel, Marie
Alaimo, Laura
Seveau, Valentine
Luciano, Marine
Mohammed, Danahe
Bruyère, Céline
Vercruysse, Eléonore
Théodoly, Olivier
Gabriele, Sylvain
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol. 11, no. 1, p. 5811 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The ability of cells to respond to substrate-bound protein gradients is crucial for many physiological processes, such as immune response, neurogenesis and cancer cell migration. However, the difficulty to produce well-controlled protein gradients has long been a limitation to our understanding of collective cell migration in response to haptotaxis. Here we use a photopatterning technique to create circular, square and linear fibronectin (FN) gradients on two-dimensional (2D) culture substrates. We observed that epithelial cells spread preferentially on zones of higher FN density, creating rounded or elongated gaps within epithelial tissues over circular or linear FN gradients, respectively. Using time-lapse experiments, we demonstrated that the gap closure mechanism in a 2D haptotaxis model requires a significant increase of the leader cell area. In addition, we found that gap closures are slower on decreasing FN densities than on homogenous FN-coated substrate and that fresh closed gaps are characterized by a lower cell density. Interestingly, our results showed that cell proliferation increases in the closed gap region after maturation to restore the cell density, but that cell–cell adhesive junctions remain weaker in scarred epithelial zones. Taken together, our findings provide a better understanding of the wound healing process over protein gradients, which are reminiscent of haptotaxis.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Scientific Reports, Vol. 11, no. 1, p. 5811 (2021)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1328225740
Document Type :
Electronic Resource