Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology (Dec 2020)

An Integrative and Modular Framework to Recapitulate Emergent Behavior in Cell Migration

  • Marina B. Cuenca,
  • Marina B. Cuenca,
  • Lucía Canedo,
  • Carolina Perez-Castro,
  • Hernan E. Grecco,
  • Hernan E. Grecco,
  • Hernan E. Grecco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2020.615759
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Cell migration has been a subject of study in a broad variety of biological systems, from morphogenetic events during development to cancer progression. In this work, we describe single-cell movement in a modular framework from which we simulate the collective behavior of glioblastoma cells, the most prevalent and malignant primary brain tumor. We used the U87 cell line, which can be grown as a monolayer or spatially closely packed and organized in 3D structures called spheroids. Our integrative model considers the most relevant mechanisms involved in cell migration: chemotaxis of attractant factor, mechanical interactions and random movement. The effect of each mechanism is integrated into the overall probability of the cells to move in a particular direction, in an automaton-like approach. Our simulations fit and reproduced the emergent behavior of the spheroids in a set of migration assays where single-cell trajectories were tracked. We also predicted the effect of migration inhibition on the colonies from simple experimental characterization of single treated cell tracks. The development of tools that allow complementing molecular knowledge in migratory cell behavior is relevant for understanding essential cellular processes, both physiological (such as organ formation, tissue regeneration among others) and pathological perspectives. Overall, this is a versatile tool that has been proven to predict individual and collective behavior in U87 cells, but that can be applied to a broad variety of scenarios.

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