Cell clusters adopt a collective amoeboid mode of migration in confined nonadhesive environments.
Diane-Laure PagèsEmmanuel DornierJean de SezeEmilie GontranAnanyo MaitraAurore MaciejewskiLi WangRui LuanJerome CartryCharlotte Canet-JourdanJoël RaingeaudGrégoire LemahieuMarceline LebelMichel DucreuxMaximiliano GelliJean Yves ScoazecMathieu CoppeyRaphaël VoituriezMatthieu PielFanny JaulinPublished in: Science advances (2022)
Cell migration is essential to living organisms and deregulated in cancer. Single cell's migration ranges from traction-dependent mesenchymal motility to contractility-driven propulsive amoeboid locomotion, but collective cell migration has only been described as a focal adhesion-dependent and traction-dependent process. Here, we show that cancer cell clusters, from patients and cell lines, migrate without focal adhesions when confined into nonadhesive microfabricated channels. Clusters coordinate and behave like giant super cells, mobilizing their actomyosin contractility at the rear to power their migration. This polarized cortex does not sustain persistent retrograde flows, of cells or actin, like in the other modes of migration but rather harnesses fluctuating cell deformations, or jiggling. Theoretical physical modeling shows this is sufficient to create a gradient of friction forces and trigger directed cluster motion. This collective amoeboid mode of migration could foster metastatic spread by enabling cells to cross a wide spectrum of environments.
Keyphrases
- cell migration
- single cell
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- stem cells
- end stage renal disease
- physical activity
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell therapy
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- bone marrow
- chronic kidney disease
- rna seq
- cell death
- high throughput
- young adults
- newly diagnosed
- escherichia coli
- staphylococcus aureus
- prognostic factors
- smooth muscle
- squamous cell
- patient reported