Abstract

Blebbing occurs in cells under high cortical tension when the membrane locally detaches from the actin cortex, resulting in pressure-driven flow of the cytosol and membrane expansion. Some cells use blebs as leading edge protrusions during cell migration, particularly in 3D environments such as a collagen matrix. Blebs can be initiated through either a localized loss of membrane-cortex adhesion or ablation of the cortex in a region. Bleb morphologies resulting from different initiation mechanisms have not been studied in detail, either experimentally or with theoretical models. Additionally, material properties of the cytoplasm, such as elasticity, have been shown to be important for limiting bleb size. A 3D dynamic computational model of the cell is presented that includes mechanics and the interactions of the cytoplasm, the actin cortex, the cell membrane, and the cytoskeleton. The model is used to quantify bleb expansion dynamics and shapes that result from simulations using different initiation mechanisms. The cytoplasm is modeled as a both viscous fluid and as a poroelastic material. Results from model simulations with a viscous fluid cytoplasm model show much broader blebs that expand faster when they are initiated via cortical ablation than when they are initiated by removing only membrane-cortex adhesion. Simulation results using the poroelastic model of the cytoplasm provide qualitatively similar bleb morphologies regardless of the initiation mechanism. Parameter studies on bleb expansion time, cytoplasmic stiffness, and permeability reveal different scaling properties, namely a smaller power-law exponent, in 3D simulations compared to 2D ones.

Highlights

  • Blebs are round membrane protrusions that are used in important cellular processes, such as migration [1] and cytokinesis [2, 3]

  • A bleb is initiated by either removing membrane-cortex adhesion in a circular region at the top of the cell or by cortical ablation

  • The boundary between adjacent triangles on the surface where the membrane-cortex adhesion parameters change from nonzero to zero forms a round circular ring around the cell, referred to as the bleb ring

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Summary

Introduction

Blebs are round membrane protrusions that are used in important cellular processes, such as migration [1] and cytokinesis [2, 3]. Cells that bleb typically have high intracellular pressure compared to outside the cell. The source of this pressure is attributed to cortical tension due to the myosin molecular motors that slide actin filaments with respect to each other [4]. A bleb is fully expanded after about 30 s [1], but the timescale is considerably shorter for cells such as Dictyostelium discoideum, where bleb expansion can occur in as little as 0.2 s [6]. Cortical components such as actin and myosin

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