Inhalt des Dokuments
Cellular membrane remodeling by fronts and waves of actin polymerization
Abstract:
During macropinocytosis, cells remodel their morphologies for the
uptake of extracellular matter. This endocytotic mechanism relies on
the collapse and closure of precursory structures, which are
propagating actin-based, ring-shaped vertical undulations at the
dorsal (top) cell membrane, a.k.a. circular dorsal ruffles (CDRs). As
such, CDRs are essential to a range of vital and pathogenic processes
alike. Here we show, based on both experimental data and theoretical
analysis, that CDRs are propagating fronts of actin polymerization in
a bistable system. The theory relies on a novel mass-conserving
reaction–diffusion model, which associates the expansion and
contraction of waves to distinct counter-propagating front solutions.
Moreover, the model predicts that under a change in parameters (for
example, biochemical conditions) CDRs may be pinned and fluctuate near
the cell boundary or exhibit complex spiral wave dynamics due to a
wave instability. We observe both phenomena also in our experiments
indicating the conditions for which macropinocytosis is suppressed.
E. Bernitt, H.-G. Dobereiner, N. S. Gov, and A. Yochelis,
Fronts and waves of actin polymerization in a bistability-based
mechanism of circular dorsal ruffles. Nat. Commun. 8, 15863
(2017).
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