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Force transmission during adhesion-independent migration.


ABSTRACT: When cells move using integrin-based focal adhesions, they pull in the direction of motion with large, ?100 Pa, stresses that contract the substrate. Integrin-mediated adhesions, however, are not required for in vivo confined migration. During focal adhesion-free migration, the transmission of propelling forces, and their magnitude and orientation, are not understood. Here, we combine theory and experiments to investigate the forces involved in adhesion-free migration. Using a non-adherent blebbing cell line as a model, we show that actin cortex flows drive cell movement through nonspecific substrate friction. Strikingly, the forces propelling the cell forward are several orders of magnitude lower than during focal-adhesion-based motility. Moreover, the force distribution in adhesion-free migration is inverted: it acts to expand, rather than contract, the substrate in the direction of motion. This fundamentally different mode of force transmission may have implications for cell-cell and cell-substrate interactions during migration in vivo.

SUBMITTER: Bergert M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6485532 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Force transmission during adhesion-independent migration.

Bergert Martin M   Erzberger Anna A   Desai Ravi A RA   Aspalter Irene M IM   Oates Andrew C AC   Charras Guillaume G   Salbreux Guillaume G   Paluch Ewa K EK  

Nature cell biology 20150316 4


When cells move using integrin-based focal adhesions, they pull in the direction of motion with large, ∼100 Pa, stresses that contract the substrate. Integrin-mediated adhesions, however, are not required for in vivo confined migration. During focal adhesion-free migration, the transmission of propelling forces, and their magnitude and orientation, are not understood. Here, we combine theory and experiments to investigate the forces involved in adhesion-free migration. Using a non-adherent blebb  ...[more]

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