论文标题
电触及期间发达和营养细胞中的细胞速度,电持续性和感应
Cellular velocity, electrical persistence and sensing in developed and vegetative cells during electrotaxis
论文作者
论文摘要
细胞具有检测电场并通过定向迁移运动对其进行反应的能力。研究确定了在定义迁移效率方面起重要作用的基因和蛋白质。尽管如此,仍在讨论了定向细胞迁移的感应和转导机制。我们使用Dictyostelium Discoideum细胞作为模型系统,用于研究直流电场中的真核细胞迁移。我们已经定义了颞电的持久性,以表征细胞在不同电场中具有的记忆。除了施加方向性偏置外,我们还观察到电场通过加速细胞沿路径的运动来影响细胞运动学。此外,对营养和短暂饥饿的细胞的研究提供了对细胞电气感应的见解。我们发现证据表明,条件的饥饿细胞的条件介质能够触发否则在电场中无法定向的营养细胞的电感。该观察结果可以通过有条件培养基因子(CMF)的存在来解释,该介质因子(CMF)在开始饥饿时被细胞分泌的蛋白质。这项研究的结果为理解触发电感的机制提供了新的见解,并将外部刺激转换为有向细胞的迁移。最后,在电场中观察到的细胞随着时间的流动性的增加可能会为伤口愈合测定法提供新的视角。
Cells have the ability to detect electric fields and respond to them with directed migratory movement. Investigations identified genes and proteins that play important roles in defining the migration efficiency. Nevertheless, the sensing and transduction mechanisms underlying directed cell migration are still under discussion. We use Dictyostelium discoideum cells as model system for studying eukaryotic cell migration in DC electric fields. We have defined the temporal electric persistence to characterize the memory that cells have in a varying electric field. In addition to imposing a directional bias, we observed that the electric field influences the cellular kinematics by accelerating the movement of cells along their paths. Moreover, the study of vegetative and briefly starved cells provided insight into the electrical sensing of cells. We found evidence that conditioned medium of starved cells was able to trigger the electrical sensing of vegetative cells that would otherwise not orient themselves in the electric field. This observation may be explained by the presence of the conditioned medium factor (CMF), a protein secreted by the cells, when they begin to starve. The results of this study give new insights into understanding the mechanism that triggers the electrical sensing and transduces the external stimulus into directed cell migration. Finally, the observed increased mobility of cells over time in an electric field could offer a novel perspective towards wound healing assays.