Abstract

Navigation of cell locomotion by gradients of soluble factors can be desensitized if the concentration of the chemo-attractant stays unchanged. It remains obscure if the guidance by immobilized extracellular matrix (ECM) as the substrate is also adaptive and if so, how can the desensitized ECM guidance be resensitized. When first interacting with a substrate containing micron-scale fibronectin (FBN) trails, highly motile fish keratocytes selectively adhere and migrate along the FBN paths. However, such guided motion become adaptive after about 10 min and the cells start to migrate out of the ECM trails. We found that a burst increase of intracellular calcium created by an uncaging technique immediately halts the undirected migration by disrupting the ECM-cytoskeleton coupling, as evidenced by the appearance of retrograde F-actin flow. When the motility later resumes, the activated integrin receptors render the cell selectively binding to the FBN path and reinitiates signaling events, including tyrosine phosphorylation of paxillin, that couple retrograde F-actin flow to the substrate. Thus, the calcium-resensitized cell can undergo a period of ECM-navigated movement, which later becomes desensitized. Our results also suggest that endogenous calcium transients as occur during spontaneous calcium oscillations may exert a cycling resensitization-desensitization control over cell's sensing of substrate guiding cues.

Highlights

  • Cell locomotion may be navigated by gradients of soluble factors [1]

  • We grow fish keratocytes onto substrates that are coated with micro-scaled paths of fibronectin (FBN), which enables us to assess extracellular matrix (ECM) navigation by analyzing different motile behaviors as the cells crawling along or across the FBN paths

  • We found that when first encountering with an ECM-patterned substrate, fish keratocytes can selectively adhere and migrate along the FBN paths only for a limited period of time, the cell’s response to substrate guidance becomes adaptive or desensitized

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Summary

Introduction

Cell locomotion may be navigated by gradients of soluble factors [1]. Similar to chemotaxis by microorganisms [2], chemotactic migrations by neuronal cells [3] or neutrophils [4] can be desensitized in the constant presence of a chemo-attractant. We found that when first encountering with an ECM-patterned substrate, fish keratocytes can selectively adhere and migrate along the FBN paths only for a limited period of time, the cell’s response to substrate guidance becomes adaptive or desensitized.

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