A mathematical method for the 3D analysis of rotating deformable systems applied on lumen-forming MDCK cell aggregates

Cell motility contributes to the formation of organs and tissues, into which multiple cells self‐organize. However such mammalian cellular motilities are not characterized in a quantitative manner and the systemic consequences are thus unknown. A mathematical tool to decipher cell motility, accounti...

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Published inCytoskeleton (Hoboken, N.J.) Vol. 67; no. 4; pp. 224 - 240
Main Authors Marmaras, Anastasios, Berge, Ulrich, Ferrari, Aldo, Kurtcuoglu, Vartan, Poulikakos, Dimos, Kroschewski, Ruth
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, USA John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.04.2010
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Summary:Cell motility contributes to the formation of organs and tissues, into which multiple cells self‐organize. However such mammalian cellular motilities are not characterized in a quantitative manner and the systemic consequences are thus unknown. A mathematical tool to decipher cell motility, accounting for changes in cell shape, within a three‐dimensional (3D) cell system was missing. We report here such a tool, usable on segmented images reporting the outline of clusters (cells) and allowing the time‐resolved 3D analysis of circular motility of these as parts of a system (cell aggregate). Our method can analyze circular motility in sub‐cellular, cellular, multi‐cellular, and also non‐cellular systems for which time‐resolved segmented cluster outlines are available. To exemplify, we characterized the circular motility of lumen‐initiating MDCK cell aggregates, embedded in extracellular matrix. We show that the organization of the major surrounding matrix fibers was not significantly affected during this cohort rotation. Using our developed tool, we discovered two classes of circular motion, rotation and random walk, organized in three behavior patterns during lumen initiation. As rotational movements were more rapid than random walk and as both could continue during lumen initiation, we conclude that neither the class nor the rate of motion regulates lumen initiation. We thus reveal a high degree of plasticity during a developmentally critical cell polarization step, indicating that lumen initiation is a robust process. However, motility rates decreased with increasing cell number, previously shown to correlate with epithelial polarization, suggesting that migratory polarization is converted into epithelial polarization during aggregate development. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Bibliography:National Center of Competence in Research on Computer Aided and Image Guided Medical Interventions (NCCR Co-Me)
ArticleID:CM20438
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)
istex:F06F219407A5939E51F6A5F3A39AB39B6BC2ED96
Monitoring Editor: George Bloom
ark:/67375/WNG-56KFK26T-3
Anastasios Marmaras and Ulrich Berge contributed equally to this work.
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SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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ISSN:1949-3584
1949-3592
DOI:10.1002/cm.20438