Noise in the direction of motion determines the spatial distribution and proliferation of migrating cell collectives
Jonathan E. Dawson, Abdul N. Malmi-Kakkada

TL;DR
This study investigates how directional noise influences the spatial organization and proliferation of migrating cell collectives, revealing that noise level modulates distribution patterns and cell growth through mechanical feedback.
Contribution
It introduces an agent-based model linking directional noise, spatial distribution, and proliferation in migrating cell collectives, highlighting the role of mechanical feedback.
Findings
Higher noise causes random cell distribution and increased proliferation.
Lower noise results in ring-like patterns with reduced proliferation.
Noise level critically influences spatial organization and growth dynamics.
Abstract
A variety of living and non-living systems exhibit collective motion. From swarm robotics to bacterial swarms, and tissue wound healing to human crowds, examples of collective motion are highly diverse but all of them share the common necessary ingredient of moving and interacting agents. While collective motion has been extensively studied in non-proliferating systems, how the proliferation of constituent agents affects their collective behavior is not well understood. Here, we focus on growing active agents as a model for cells and study how the interplay between noise in their direction of movement and proliferation determines the overall spatial pattern of collective motion. In this agent-based model, motile cells possess the ability to adhere to each other through cell-cell adhesion, grow in size and divide. Cell-cell interactions influence not only the direction of cell movement…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Diffusion and Search Dynamics
