Nanofiber Alignment Mediates the Pattern of Single Cell Migration.
Yiqun WangYuan YaoPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2020)
In natural tissue, nanofibrils in extracellular matrix (ECM), such as collagen fibrils, direct cell migration through contacting guidance. The contacting nanofibers on cell-ECM interface are reorganized from curl fibers to straightened fibers. However, how these nanofibers regulate single cell migration remains obscure. To investigate this issue, we fabricated collagen/polymer based biomimetic nanofiber sheets of varying topography. And we selected tumorigenic cell KGN and nontumorigenic cell 293T for comparison. We found KGN showed higher sensitivity to the nanofiber alignment rather than the nontumorigenic cell 293T, in morphological change, trajectory adaptation, and velocity variation. We also found aligned nanofibers shaped both KGN and 293T into elongated spindle morphology. Comparatively, KGN had greater perimeter and lower roundness than 293T. To study the dynamics of single cell migration of KGN and 293T, we conducted trajectory tracking and siRNA validation on regulatory proteins. We found nanofibers of varying topography regulated the patterns of single cell migration differently. For KGN cell, β-catenin, Rac1, and Cdc42 participated in its directional migration, but it was impervious to vimentin. Comparatively, epithelial cell 293T involved vimentin in its directional migration.