顺时针方向的
生物物理学
收缩性
形态发生
旋转(数学)
物理
化学
肌动蛋白
多细胞生物
收缩(语法)
手性(物理)
分子马达
正面反馈
细胞
肌肉收缩
解剖
细胞生物学
运动蛋白
胚胎干细胞
细胞膜
生物
机械
细胞内
牵引力
对称性破坏
活性物质
作者
Ghina Badih,Alexandre Schaeffer,Benoit Vianay,Pauline Smilovici,Laurent Blanchoin,Manuel Théry,Laetitia Kurzawa
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2415028122
摘要
Chirality is a conserved biological feature with critical implications in tissue morphogenesis and embryonic development. In culture, multicellular groups exhibit spontaneous chiral symmetry break when moving collectively on micropatterned surfaces. Although several studies have shown that actin network integrity and actomyosin network contractility contribute to the establishment of the chirality of the movement, the role of contractile forces to the directionality of the chiral bias in collectives remains to be elucidated. Here, we studied the contractile forces produced by a minimal collective constituted of a pair of endothelial cells. We first show that cell doublets confined on disk-shaped micropatterns undergo spontaneous and persistent chiral swirling, displaying a mild but robust clockwise bias, as the one observed in bigger collectives. This bias could be amplified or reversed by modulating contractile forces. Traction force measurements revealed that high forces tend to drive counterclockwise rotation whereas low forces rather favor a clockwise rotation. Furthermore, the study of heterotypic doublets indicates that the direction of the rotation is determined by the more contractile cells within the doublets. These results thus revealed that contractile leader cells could drive the chiral motion of minimal collectives.
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