A new model for cell division and migration with spontaneous topology changes

Soft Matter ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 4332-4339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Mkrtchyan ◽  
Jan Åström ◽  
Mikko Karttunen

A two-dimensional single-cell based model for cell divisions and tissue growth.

1998 ◽  
Vol 4 (S2) ◽  
pp. 1066-1067
Author(s):  
Heide Schatten ◽  
Maureen Ripple ◽  
Ron Balczon ◽  
Meghan Taylor ◽  
Michael Crosser

Cancer is a disease characterized by uncontrolled cell divisions in which the molecular controls for cytoskeletal regulation are bypassed. Cell division is governed by centrosomes, microtubule-organizing cell organelles which are crucial for the organization of the mitotic apparatus during mitosis and cell division. Because centrosome abnormalities are observed in the most common human cancers, we used immunofluorescence and transmission electron microscopy to determine centrosome organization in the human androgenresponsive prostate cancer cell line LNCaP and the androgen-independent prostate cancer cell line DU145. During interphase, centrosomes are located in close vicinity to the outer nuclear membrane, duplicate during S-phase, and become separated to the mitotic poles during the transition from interphase to mitosis. Centrosome regulation is based on a number of different factors which are only partly understood. Hormones play a role during developmental regulation of prostates which might trigger the activation of centrosome proteins and consequent cell divisions in order to ensure tissue growth.


PeerJ ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. e3314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Xu ◽  
Yan Xu ◽  
Dehua Ji ◽  
Ting Chen ◽  
Changsheng Chen ◽  
...  

Background Pyropia haitanensis thalli, which are made of a single layer of polygonal cells, are a perfect model for studying the morphogenesis of multi-celled organisms because their cell proliferation process is an excellent example of the manner in which cells control their geometry to create a two-dimensional plane. Methods Cellular geometries of thalli at different stages of growth revealed by light microscope analysis. Results This study showed the cell division transect the middle of the selected paired-sides to divide the cell into two equal portions, thus resulting in cell sides ≥4 and keeping the average number of cell sides at approximately six even as the thallus continued to grow, such that more than 90% of the cells in thalli longer than 0.08 cm had 5–7 sides. However, cell division could not fully explain the distributions of intracellular angles. Results showed that cell-division-associated fast reorientation of cell sides and cell divisions together caused 60% of the inner angles of cells from longer thalli to range from 100–140°. These results indicate that cells prefer to form regular polygons. Conclusions This study suggests that appropriate cell-packing geometries maintained by cell division and reorientation of cell walls can keep the cells bordering each other closely, without gaps.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antony M. Jose

AbstractLife is perpetuated through a single-cell bottleneck between generations in many organisms. Here, I highlight that this cell holds information in two distinct forms: in the linear DNA sequence that is replicated during cell divisions, and in the three-dimensional arrangement of molecules that can change during development but that is recreated at the start of each generation. These two interdependent stores of information – one replicating with each cell division and the other cycling with a period of one generation – coevolve while perpetuating an organism. Unlike the genome, the cycling arrangement of molecules, which could include RNAs, proteins, sugars, lipids, etc., is not well understood. Because this arrangement and the genome are together transmitted from one generation to the next, analysis of both is necessary to understand evolution, origins of inherited diseases, and consequences of genome engineering. Recent developments suggest that tools are in place to examine how all the information to build an organism is encoded within a single cell, and how this cell code is reproduced in every generation.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Werner ◽  
Jack Case ◽  
Marc J. Williams ◽  
Kate Chkhaidze ◽  
Daniel Temko ◽  
...  

AbstractCancer is driven by complex evolutionary dynamics involving billions of cells. Increasing effort has been dedicated to sequence single tumour cells, but obtaining robust measurements remains challenging. Here we show that multi-region sequencing of bulk tumour samples contains quantitative information on single-cell divisions that is accessible if combined with evolutionary theory. Using high-throughput data from 16 human cancers, we measured the in vivo per-cell point mutation rate (mean: 1.69×10−8 bp per cell division) and per-cell survival rate (mean: 0.57) in individual patient tumours from colon, lung and renal cancers. Per-cell mutation rates varied 50-fold between individuals, and per-cell survival rates were between nearly-homeostatic and almost perfect cell doublings, equating to tumour ages between 1 and 19 years. Furthermore, reanalysing a recent dataset of 89 whole-genome sequenced healthy haematopoietic stem cells, we find 1.14 mutations per genome per cell division and near perfect cell doublings (per-cell survival rate: 0.96) during early haematopoietic development. Our analysis measures in vivo the most fundamental properties of human cancer and healthy somatic evolution at single-cell resolution within single individuals.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 751-751
Author(s):  
Hojun Li ◽  
Anirudh Natarajan ◽  
Jideofor Ezike ◽  
M Inmaculada Barrasa ◽  
Huan Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract To generate the billions of new erythrocytes required on a daily basis, erythroid progenitor cells must exponentially increase in number before undergoing terminal differentiation. A limited number of cell divisions occur during erythropoietin (EPO)-regulated erythroid terminal differentiation, but the principal regulation of erythroid transit-amplification occurs earlier in erythropoiesis between the burst forming unit-erythroid (BFU-E) and colony forming unit-erythroid (CFU-E) stages of development. The importance of this EPO-independent early erythropoietic process is highlighted in Diamond-Blackfan Anemia (DBA). DBA is characterized by pure red cell aplasia, loss of BFU-E and CFU-E progenitors in the bone marrow, and severe anemia despite high circulating EPO levels. The only known effective medical therapy for DBA also provides insight into the regulation of erythroid transit-amplification. In patients responsive to glucocorticoid treatment, there are increased numbers of BFU-E and CFU-E progenitors in the bone marrow, and ex vivo culture studies indicate that the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone (Dex) predominantly increases proliferative capacity of BFU-Es, with minimal effect on proliferative capacity of CFU-Es. These findings led to a prevailing model that glucocorticoids increase BFU-E proliferative capacity by stimulating several rounds of self-renewal cell divisions. However, a limitation of this model is that there is no mechanistic explanation for how BFU-Es regulate the fate choice of undergoing a self-renewal cell division versus a differentiation cell division in the presence or absence of glucocorticoids. In this study, we address this question by examining progression of early erythroid progenitor development at single cell resolution, and subsequently elucidate the true mechanistic nature of glucocorticoid-induced erythroid progenitor proliferative capacity amplification. By performing single cell transcriptome profiling (scRNAseq) of primary-isolated mouse fetal liver BFU-Es, CFU-Es, and their developmental intermediates, we identify a continuum of transcriptomic states during erythroid transit-amplification when performing principle component analysis (PCA) on transcriptomes of individual cells. We show that ex vivo culture of primary-isolated BFU-Es in serum free media supplemented with stem cell factor, insulin-like growth factor 1, and EPO results in developmental progression along the transcriptome continuum when performing scRNAseq and PCA on cultured BFU-Es. The addition of Dex into this culture system does not result in self-renewal of BFU-Es at the transcriptome level, but rather still results in developmental progression, albeit to less of a degree per cell division than BFU-Es cultured without Dex. We additionally show that the continuum of transcriptome states in erythroid transit-amplification is reflective of a continuum of functional states, with developmental progression characterized by decreasing proliferative capacity and decreasing glucocorticoid-responsiveness. Lastly, through manual separation of daughter cells resulting from a BFU-E cell division, we demonstrate that BFU-E cell division is a symmetric process at the transcriptome level, both with and without the addition of Dex. Our results clarify the nature of how glucocorticoids amplify BFU-E proliferative capacity. As opposed to stimulating a finite number of BFU-E self-renewal cell divisions, glucocorticoids decrease the extent of progression through the erythroid transit-amplifying developmental continuum per cell division. Thus, a decreased rate of progression through the developmental continuum is associated with an increased number of transit-amplifying cell divisions prior to terminal differentiation. These findings are important not only for the rational development of glucocorticoid-alternatives for treating DBA, but also for all bone marrow failure syndromes characterized by progenitor cell hypoplasia. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
Krishan Awtar

Exposure of cells to low sublethal but mitosis-arresting doses of vinblastine sulfate (Velban) results in the initial arrest of cells in mitosis followed by their subsequent return to an “interphase“-like stage. A large number of these cells reform their nuclear membranes and form large multimicronucleated cells, some containing as many as 25 or more micronuclei (1). Formation of large multinucleate cells is also caused by cytochalasin, by causing the fusion of daughter cells at the end of an otherwise .normal cell division (2). By the repetition of this process through subsequent cell divisions, large cells with 6 or more nuclei are formed.


1984 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 1634
Author(s):  
M.O. Pharaboz ◽  
V. Albaladejo ◽  
Y. Morel ◽  
O. Pascal ◽  
J. André

Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 1445
Author(s):  
Taisa Nogueira Pansani ◽  
Thanh Huyen Phan ◽  
Qingyu Lei ◽  
Alexey Kondyurin ◽  
Bill Kalionis ◽  
...  

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are nanoparticles released by cells that contain a multitude of biomolecules, which act synergistically to signal multiple cell types. EVs are ideal candidates for promoting tissue growth and regeneration. The tissue regenerative potential of EVs raises the tantalizing possibility that immobilizing EVs on implant surfaces could potentially generate highly bioactive and cell-instructive surfaces that would enhance implant integration into the body. Such surfaces could address a critical limitation of current implants, which do not promote bone tissue formation or bond bone. Here, we developed bioactive titanium surface coatings (SurfEV) using two types of EVs: secreted by decidual mesenchymal stem cells (DEVs) and isolated from fermented papaya fluid (PEVs). For each EV type, we determined the size, morphology, and molecular composition. High concentrations of DEVs enhanced cell proliferation, wound closure, and migration distance of osteoblasts. In contrast, the cell proliferation and wound closure decreased with increasing concentration of PEVs. DEVs enhanced Ca/P deposition on the titanium surface, which suggests improvement in bone bonding ability of the implant (i.e., osteointegration). EVs also increased production of Ca and P by osteoblasts and promoted the deposition of mineral phase, which suggests EVs play key roles in cell mineralization. We also found that DEVs stimulated the secretion of secondary EVs observed by the presence of protruding structures on the cell membrane. We concluded that, by functionalizing implant surfaces with specialized EVs, we will be able to enhance implant osteointegration by improving hydroxyapatite formation directly at the surface and potentially circumvent aseptic loosening of implants.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann J. Ligocki ◽  
Wen Fury ◽  
Christian Gutierrez ◽  
Christina Adler ◽  
Tao Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractBulk RNA sequencing of a tissue captures the gene expression profile from all cell types combined. Single-cell RNA sequencing identifies discrete cell-signatures based on transcriptomic identities. Six adult human corneas were processed for single-cell RNAseq and 16 cell clusters were bioinformatically identified. Based on their transcriptomic signatures and RNAscope results using representative cluster marker genes on human cornea cross-sections, these clusters were confirmed to be stromal keratocytes, endothelium, several subtypes of corneal epithelium, conjunctival epithelium, and supportive cells in the limbal stem cell niche. The complexity of the epithelial cell layer was captured by eight distinct corneal clusters and three conjunctival clusters. These were further characterized by enriched biological pathways and molecular characteristics which revealed novel groupings related to development, function, and location within the epithelial layer. Moreover, epithelial subtypes were found to reflect their initial generation in the limbal region, differentiation, and migration through to mature epithelial cells. The single-cell map of the human cornea deepens the knowledge of the cellular subsets of the cornea on a whole genome transcriptional level. This information can be applied to better understand normal corneal biology, serve as a reference to understand corneal disease pathology, and provide potential insights into therapeutic approaches.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Werner ◽  
Jack Case ◽  
Marc J. Williams ◽  
Ketevan Chkhaidze ◽  
Daniel Temko ◽  
...  

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