# Modeling cell migration regulated by cell-ECM micromechanical coupling

**Authors:** Yu Zheng, Hanqing Nan, Qihui Fan, Xiaochen Wang, Liyu Liu, and Ruchuan Liu, Fangfu Ye, Bo Sun, Yang Jiao

arXiv: 1905.06973 · 2019-10-16

## TL;DR

This paper presents a computational model of cell migration that incorporates cell-ECM mechanical interactions, accurately reproduces single-cell dynamics, and predicts collective migration behaviors validated by experiments.

## Contribution

The novel model explicitly simulates cell-ECM micro-mechanical coupling, including focal adhesion dynamics and ECM remodeling, advancing understanding of cell migration mechanisms.

## Key findings

- Model reproduces single-cell migration dynamics.
- Durotaxis and contact guidance emerge naturally from the model.
- Predicts multi-cell migration dynamics validated by in vitro experiments.

## Abstract

Cell migration in fibreous extracellular matrix (ECM) is crucial to many physiological and pathological processes such as tissue regeneration, immune response and cancer progression. During migration, individual cells can generate active pulling forces via actin filament contraction, which are transmitted to the ECM fibers through focal adhesion complexes, remodel the ECM, and eventually propagate to and can be sensed by other cells in the system. The microstructure and physical properties of the ECM can also significantly influence cell migration, e.g., via durotaxis and contact guidance. Here, we develop a computational model for cell migration regulated by cell-ECM micro-mechanical coupling. Our model explicitly takes into account a variety of cellular level processes including focal adhesion formation and disassembly, active traction force generation and cell locomotion due to actin filament contraction, transmission and propagation of tensile forces in the ECM, as well as the resulting ECM remodeling. We validate our model by accurately reproducing single-cell dynamics of MCF-10A breast cancer cells migrating on collagen gels and show that the durotaxis and contact guidance effects naturally arise as a consequence of the cell-ECM micro-mechanical interactions considered in the model. Moreover, our model predicts strongly correlated multi-cellular migration dynamics, which are resulted from the ECM-mediated mechanical coupling among the migrating cell and are subsequently verified in {\it in vitro} experiments using MCF-10A cells. Our computational model provides a robust tool to investigate emergent collective dynamics of multi-cellular systems in complex {\it in vivo} micro-environment and can be utilized to design {\it in vitro} micro-environments to guide collective behaviors and self-organization of cells.

## Full text

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## Figures

11 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.06973/full.md

## References

67 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.06973/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.06973