Intercellular communication induces glycolytic synchronization waves between individually oscillating cells

Many organs have internal structures with spatially differentiated and sometimes temporally synchronized groups of cells. The mechanisms leading to such differentiation and coordination are not well understood. Here we design a diffusion-limited microfluidic system to mimic a multicellular organ str...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 118; no. 6; pp. 1 - 8
Main Authors Mojica-Benavides, Martin, van Niekerk, David D., Mijalkov, Mite, Snoep, Jacky L., Mehlig, Bernhard, Volpe, Giovanni, Goksör, Mattias, Adiels, Caroline B.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 09.02.2021
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Summary:Many organs have internal structures with spatially differentiated and sometimes temporally synchronized groups of cells. The mechanisms leading to such differentiation and coordination are not well understood. Here we design a diffusion-limited microfluidic system to mimic a multicellular organ structure with peripheral blood flow and test whether a group of individually oscillating yeast cells could form subpopulations of spatially differentiated and temporally synchronized cells. Upon substrate addition, the dynamic response at single-cell level shows glycolytic oscillations, leading to wave fronts traveling through the monolayered population and to synchronized communities at well-defined positions in the cell chamber. A detailed mechanistic model with the architectural structure of the flow chamber incorporated successfully predicts the spatial-temporal experimental data, and allows for a molecular understanding of the observed phenomena. The intricate interplay of intracellular biochemical reaction networks leading to the oscillations, combined with intercellular communication via metabolic intermediates and fluid dynamics of the reaction chamber, is responsible for the generation of the subpopulations of synchronized cells. This mechanism, as analyzed from the model simulations, is experimentally tested using different concentrations of cyanide stress solutions. The results are reproducible and stable, despite cellular heterogeneity, and the spontaneous community development is reminiscent of a zoned cell differentiation often observed in multicellular organs.
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1M.G. and C.B.A. contributed equally to this work.
Author contributions: M.M.-B., M.G., and C.B.A. designed research; M.M.-B. performed research; M.M.-B., D.D.v.N., M.M., J.L.S., and G.V. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; M.M.-B., D.D.v.N., M.M., G.V., and C.B.A. analyzed data; and M.M.-B., D.D.v.N., J.L.S., B.M., G.V., M.G., and C.B.A. wrote the paper.
Edited by David A. Weitz, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, and approved January 3, 2021 (received for review May 19, 2020)
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2010075118