The spontaneous emergence of leaders and followers in a mathematical model of cranial neural crest cell migration
Samuel W.S. Johnson, Ruth E. Baker, Philip K. Maini

TL;DR
This paper presents a mathematical model of cranial neural crest cell migration demonstrating that leader and follower cell roles can spontaneously emerge from collective dynamics, aligning with experimental observations without predefining phenotypes.
Contribution
The study develops a polarity-based agent model showing emergent leader-follower roles in cell migration, challenging fixed-phenotype assumptions in prior models.
Findings
Leader-follower phenotypes emerge spontaneously in simulations.
Model aligns with experimental CNCC migration observations.
All cells follow identical rules, no fixed roles imposed.
Abstract
Many agent-based mathematical models of cranial neural crest cell (CNCC) migration impose a binary phenotypic partition of cells into either leaders or followers. In such models, the movement of leader cells at the front of collectives is guided by local chemoattractant gradients, while follower cells behind leaders move according to local cell-cell guidance cues. Although such model formulations have yielded many insights into the mechanisms underpinning CNCC migration, they rely on fixed phenotypic traits that are difficult to reconcile with evidence of phenotypic plasticity in vivo. A later agent-based model of CNCC migration aimed to address this limitation by allowing cells to adaptively combine chemotactic and cell-cell guidance cues during migration. In this model, cell behaviour adapts instantaneously in response to environmental cues, which precludes the identification of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical Biology Tumor Growth · Memory and Neural Mechanisms · Developmental Biology and Gene Regulation
