Abstract

As we begin to understand the signals that drive chemotaxis in vivo, it is becoming clear that there is a complex interplay of chemotactic factors, which changes over time as the inflammatory response evolves. New animal models such as transgenic lines of zebrafish, which are near transparent and where the neutrophils express a green fluorescent protein, have the potential to greatly increase our understanding of the chemotactic process under conditions of wounding and infection from video microscopy data. Measurement of the chemoattractants over space (and their evolution over time) is a key objective for understanding the signals driving neutrophil chemotaxis. However, it is not possible to measure and visualise the most important contributors to in vivo chemotaxis, and in fact the understanding of the main contributors at any particular time is incomplete. The key insight that we make in this investigation is that the neutrophils themselves are sensing the underlying field that is driving their action and we can use the observations of neutrophil movement to infer the hidden net chemoattractant field by use of a novel computational framework. We apply the methodology to multiple in vivo neutrophil recruitment data sets to demonstrate this new technique and find that the method provides consistent estimates of the chemoattractant field across the majority of experiments. The framework that we derive represents an important new methodology for cell biologists investigating the signalling processes driving cell chemotaxis, which we label the neutrophils eye-view of the chemoattractant field.

Highlights

  • There are many cell-types whose movements are driven by sensing external chemical gradients in the process known as chemotaxis [1,2]

  • In response to tissue damage and infection resulting from wounding, neutrophils are recruited to the site of injury guided by chemoattractants [3,4]

  • There are still many open questions regarding the complex signalling processes that drive neutrophil migratory responses [11], which are being increasingly studied in vivo [12,13,14]

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Summary

Introduction

There are many cell-types whose movements are driven by sensing external chemical gradients in the process known as chemotaxis [1,2]. This problem motivates the development of methods for chemoattractant field identification, not from direct measurement, but from functionally related variables such as neutrophil movement.

Results
Conclusion
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