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Spatiotemporal Control Over Multicellular Migration Using Green Light Reversible Cell-Cell Interactions.

Brice Nzigou MomboBrent M BijonowskiSamaneh RasoulinejadMarc MuellerSeraphine Valeska Wegner
Published in: Advanced biology (2021)
The regulation of cell-cell adhesions in space and time plays a crucial role in cell biology, especially in the coordination of multicellular behavior. Therefore, tools that allow for the modulation of cell-cell interactions with high precision are of great interest to a better understanding of their roles and building tissue-like structures. Herein, the green light-responsive protein CarH is expressed at the plasma membrane of cells as an artificial cell adhesion receptor, so that upon addition of its cofactor vitamin B12 specific cell-cell interactions form and lead to cell clustering in a concentration-dependent manner. Upon green light illumination, the CarH based cell-cell interactions disassemble and allow for their reversion with high spatiotemporal control. Moreover, these artificial cell-cell interactions impact cell migration, as observed in a wound-healing assay. When the cells interact with each other in the presence of vitamin B12 in the dark, the cells form on a solid front and migrate collectively; however, under green light illumination, individual cells migrate randomly out of the monolayer. Overall, the possibility of precisely controlling cell-cell interactions and regulating multicellular behavior is a potential pathway to gaining more insight into cell-cell interactions in biological processes.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • high throughput
  • risk assessment
  • induced apoptosis
  • mass spectrometry
  • cancer therapy
  • human health
  • pi k akt