Cells play 'tag' to determine direction of movement

Trajectories of neural crest cells (blue) chasing placode tissue (purple).
Trajectories of neural crest cells (blue) chasing placode tissue (purple).
Research
(17/06/2013)
Researchers from the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) and the University of Barcelona, together with researchers from King's College London and University College London have found that cells in our bodies, when moving collectively, carry out something similar to a game of ʻtagʼ to coordinate their movement in a particular direction.
 
Trajectories of neural crest cells (blue) chasing placode tissue (purple).
Trajectories of neural crest cells (blue) chasing placode tissue (purple).
Research
17/06/2013
Researchers from the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) and the University of Barcelona, together with researchers from King's College London and University College London have found that cells in our bodies, when moving collectively, carry out something similar to a game of ʻtagʼ to coordinate their movement in a particular direction.
 
Researchers from the University of Barcelona and the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC), together with researchers from King's College London and University College London have found that cells in our bodies, when moving collectively, carry out something similar to a game of ʻtagʼ to coordinate their movement in a particular direction.
 
Scientists from Barcelona and London, looked at cells in the neural crest, a very mobile embryonic structure in vertebrates that gives rise to most of the peripheral nervous system and to other cell types in the cardiovascular system, pigment cells in the skin, and some bones, cartilage, and connective tissue in the head. Researchers saw that, during development, these neural crest cells ʻchaseʼ other types of cells —so-called placodal cells that give rise to the sensory organs— which dash away when approached, thus propelling the cell sheet in a certain direction.
 
“The effect can also be likened to a donkey and carrot effect, with the neural crest cells —the donkey— chasing but never quite reaching the carrot, the placodal cells,” explains Xavier Trepat, ICREA Research Professor of the UB and of the IBEC. “The ʻchasingʼ occurs when a signaling protein, Sdf1, is present, while the ʻrunʼ effect is triggered by a different protein, N-Cadherin”, he adds.
 
Researchersʼ findings shed new light on collective cell migration, a critical process in development and wound healing, but which is also inherent to the development of diseases such as cancer. Understanding more about how and why cells move the way they do can lead to valuable insights into how and why cancers occur and spread. 
 
Article:
E. Theveneau, B. Steventon, E. Scarpa, S. Garcia, X. Trepat, A. Streit and R. Mayor. “Chase-and-run between adjacent cell populations promotes directional collective migration”. Nature Cell Biology, 16 June 2013. DOI: 10.1038/ncb2772