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Cells move by controlling the stiffness of their neighbours

10.26.21 | eLife

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Cells can control their ability to move through the body by using a protein called fascin to control the stiffness of neighbouring cells, suggests a study published today in eLife.

The discovery may help scientists better understand how cells migrate during early development and what can happen to them to cause certain developmental disorders. It may also provide new insights on how cancer cells spread and help scientists develop new ways to slow or stop them.

Laboratory studies of cell migration have shown that cells move more quickly and easily across stiffer artificial surfaces, but whether the same conditions promote cell movement in living organisms was still unknown.

“Understanding the mechanisms controlling this balance of forces between migrating cells and the surfaces they move across in living organisms is essential to understanding how developmental defects caused by aberrant migration and cancer metastasis occur,” explains first author Maureen Lamb, Graduate Student at the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, US.

To study cell movement in more natural circumstances, Lamb and the team examined the movement of cells in the ovaries of fruit flies. They looked specifically at what happened in cells that were genetically engineered to lack a protein called fascin, which regulates a cell-stiffening protein called myosin.

They found that in the cells lacking fascin, the activity of myosin increased, and both the cells and their neighbouring cells stiffened, hindering their movement. When the team restored fascin to the migrating cells, this led to normal myosin activity and stiffness of the neighbouring cells, which promoted cell movement. They also discovered a mechanism that cells can use to turn fascin on and off.

“We’ve shown that migrating cells use fascin to control the stiffness of surrounding cells, making it easier for them to move through the body,” Lamb says.

The unexpected discovery that cells can control their ability to move by regulating the stiffness of surrounding cells may have important implications for understanding how cancer cells spread. When cancer spreads beyond the original tumour and forms metastases, it becomes more difficult to treat and reduces the patient’s chances of survival.

“If cancer cells use the same mechanisms identified in our study, then it may be possible to reduce their spread by altering the tissues that they prefer to move across, so that the tissues don’t stiffen in response to the cells,” says senior author Tina Tootle, Associate Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology at the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine. “The next step is to test this idea in larger organisms to see if it could be a potential strategy to slow or prevent the spread of cancer.”

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About University of Iowa Health Care

University of Iowa Health Care is the state’s only comprehensive academic medical centre, dedicated to providing world-class health care and health-related outreach services to all Iowans. Based in Iowa City, UI Health Care includes University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics , University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine , and University of Iowa Physicians, the state’s most comprehensive multi-specialty physician group practice.

10.7554/eLife.69836

Experimental study

Animals

Fascin limits Myosin activity within Drosophila border cells to control substrate stiffness and promote migration

26-Oct-2021

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Emily Packer
eLife
e.packer@elifesciences.org
Jennifer Brown
University of Iowa Health Care
jennifer-l-brown@uiowa.edu

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
eLife. (2021, October 26). Cells move by controlling the stiffness of their neighbours. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOOD73L/cells-move-by-controlling-the-stiffness-of-their-neighbours.html
MLA:
"Cells move by controlling the stiffness of their neighbours." Brightsurf News, Oct. 26 2021, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOOD73L/cells-move-by-controlling-the-stiffness-of-their-neighbours.html.