Hydrodynamic effects on the motility of crawling eukaryotic cells.


Journal

Soft matter
ISSN: 1744-6848
Titre abrégé: Soft Matter
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101295070

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
07 Feb 2020
Historique:
pubmed: 15 1 2020
medline: 28 8 2020
entrez: 15 1 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Eukaryotic cell motility is crucial during development, wound healing, the immune response, and cancer metastasis. Some eukaryotic cells can swim, but cells more commonly adhere to and crawl along the extracellular matrix. We study the relationship between hydrodynamics and adhesion that describe whether a cell is swimming, crawling, or combining these motions. Our simple model of a cell, based on the three-sphere swimmer, is capable of both swimming and crawling. As cell-matrix adhesion strength increases, the influence of hydrodynamics on migration diminishes. Cells with significant adhesion can crawl with speeds much larger than their nonadherent, swimming counterparts. We predict that, while most eukaryotic cells are in the strong-adhesion limit, increasing environment viscosity or decreasing cell-matrix adhesion could lead to significant hydrodynamic effects even in crawling cells. Signatures of hydrodynamic effects include a dependence of cell speed on the presence of a nearby substrate or interactions between noncontacting cells. These signatures will be suppressed at large adhesion strengths, but even strongly adherent cells will generate relevant fluid flows that will advect nearby passive particles and swimmers.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31934705
doi: 10.1039/c9sm01797f
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1349-1358

Auteurs

Melissa H Mai (MH)

Department of Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

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Classifications MeSH