epithelial migration
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Author(s):  
Debbie Clements ◽  
Suzanne Miller ◽  
Roya Babaei-Jadidi ◽  
Mike Adam ◽  
S. Steven Potter ◽  
...  

Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a female specific cystic lung disease in which TSC2 deficient LAM cells, LAM-Associated Fibroblasts (LAFs) and other cell types infiltrate the lungs. LAM lesions can be associated with type II alveolar epithelial cells (AT2 cells). We hypothesised that the behaviour of AT2 cells in LAM is influenced locally by LAFs. We tested this hypothesis in patient samples and in vitro. In human LAM lung, nodular AT2 cells show enhanced proliferation when compared to parenchymal AT2 cells, demonstrated by increased Ki67 expression. Further, nodular AT2 cells express proteins associated with epithelial activation in other disease states including Matrix Metalloproteinase 7, and Fibroblast Growth Factor 7 (FGF7). In vitro, LAF conditioned medium is mitogenic and positively chemotactic for epithelial cells, increases the rate of epithelial repair and protects against apoptosis. In vitro, LAM patient-derived TSC2 null cells cocultured with LAFs upregulate LAF expression of the epithelial chemokine and mitogen FGF7, which is a potential mediator of fibroblast-epithelial crosstalk, in an mTOR dependent manner. In a novel in vitro model of LAM, ex vivo cultured LAM lung-derived microtissues promote both epithelial migration and adhesion. Our findings suggest that AT2 cells in LAM display a proliferative, activated phenotype and that fibroblast accumulation following LAM cell infiltration into the parenchyma contributes to this change in AT2 cell behaviour. Fibroblast-derived FGF7 may contribute to the cross-talk between LAFs and hyperplastic epithelium in vivo, but does not appear to be the main driver of the effects of LAFs on epithelial cells in vitro.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Crystal R. Naudin ◽  
Joshua A. Owens ◽  
Lauren C. Askew ◽  
Ramsha Nabihah Khan ◽  
Christopher D. Scharer ◽  
...  

AbstractThe use of beneficial bacteria to promote gastrointestinal heath is widely practiced, however, the mechanisms whereby many of these microbes elicit their beneficial effects remain elusive. Previously, we conducted a screen for the discovery of novel beneficial microbes and identified the potent cytoprotective effects of a strain of Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris. Here, we show that dietary supplementation with L. lactis subsp. cremoris induced transcript enrichment of a set of genes within the colon whose functions are associated with host cell and microbe interactions. Specifically, L. lactis subsp. cremoris induced the expression of tlr2, which we show was required for L. lactis subsp. cremoris to elicit its beneficial effects on the intestine. L. lactis subsp. cremoris did not confer beneficial effects in mice deficient in TLR-2, or deficient in its adaptor protein Myd88 in chronic gut injury models. In addition to cytoprotection, culture supernatant from L. lactis subsp. cremoris accelerated epithelial migration in a cultured epithelial cell scratch wound assay; and effect that was abrogated by a TLR-2 antagonist. Furthermore, L. lactis subsp. cremoris accelerated epithelial tissue restitution following the infliction of a colonic wound biopsy in a TLR-2 and Myd88-dependent manner. Within colonic wounds, L. lactis subsp. cremoris induced the activation of signaling pathways that function in tissue restitution following injury, including the ERK signaling pathway, and of focal adhesion complex (FAC) proteins. Together, these data demonstrate that L. lactis subsp. cremoris signals via the TLR2/MyD88-axis to confer cytoprotection and accelarated tissue restituion in the gut epithelium. These data point to evolving adaptations where beneficial gut microbes moduate innate immune signaling to excert positive influnces on host physiology.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin M Sherrard ◽  
Maureen Cetera ◽  
Sally Horne-Badovinac

Stress fibers (SFs) are actomyosin bundles commonly found in individually migrating cells in culture. However, whether and how cells use SFs to migrate in vivo or collectively is largely unknown. Studying the collective migration of the follicular epithelial cells in Drosophila, we found that the SFs in these cells show a novel treadmilling behavior that allows them to persist as the cells migrate over multiple cell lengths. Treadmilling SFs grow at their fronts by adding new integrin-based adhesions and actomyosin segments over time. This causes the SFs to have many internal adhesions along their lengths, instead of adhesions only at the ends. The front-forming adhesions remain stationary relative to the substrate and typically disassemble as the cell rear approaches. By contrast, a different type of adhesion forms at the SF’s terminus that slides with the cell’s trailing edge as the actomyosin ahead of it shortens. We further show that SF treadmilling depends on cell movement and identify a developmental switch in the formins that mediate SF assembly, with Dishevelled-associated activator of morphogenesis acting during migratory stages and Diaphanous acting during postmigratory stages. We propose that treadmilling SFs keep each cell on a linear trajectory, thereby promoting the collective motility required for epithelial migration.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabeth Robinson ◽  
Jenny Amanda Herbert ◽  
Machaela Palor ◽  
Luo Ren ◽  
Isobel Larken ◽  
...  

In the airways, recruitment and activation of neutrophils occurs early following respiratory virus (RSV) infection and is associated with the development of severe disease. We investigated whether activated neutrophils selectively migrate across virus infected airway epithelial cells, or whether trans-epithelial migration is sufficient and necessary for neutrophil activation. We profiled the movement and adherence of fluorescently labelled human neutrophils during migration across primary human airway epithelial cells (AECs) infected with RSV in vitro. In RSV infected AECs neutrophil adherence, with clustering occurs after 15-18 minutes. Using flow cytometry, we found that, when migration occurred, expression of CD11b, CD62L, CD64, NE and MPO were increased in all compartments of our system and RSV infection further increased CD11b and NE expression. We found evidence suggesting that migrated neutrophils can migrate in reverse to the basolateral membrane. Our study provides novel insights into how airway activated neutrophils mediate systemic disease in respiratory virus infection.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teng Teng ◽  
Camilla Teng ◽  
Vesa Kaartinen ◽  
Jeffrey O. Bush

AbstractTissue fusion is an oft-employed process in morphogenesis which often requires the removal of the epithelia intervening multiple distinct primordia to form one continuous structure. In the mammalian secondary palate, a midline epithelial seam (MES) forms between two palatal shelves and must be removed to allow mesenchymal confluence. Abundant apoptosis and cell extrusion in this epithelial seam support their importance in its removal. However, by genetically disrupting the intrinsic apoptotic regulators BAX and BAK within the MES, we find a complete loss of cell death and cell extrusion, but successful removal of the MES, indicating that developmental compensation enables fusion. Novel static and live imaging approaches reveal that the MES is removed through a unique form of collective epithelial cell migration in which epithelial trails and islands stream through the mesenchyme to reach the oral and nasal epithelial surfaces. These epithelial trails and islands begin to express periderm markers while retaining expression of the basal epithelial marker ΔNp63, suggesting their migration to the oral and nasal surface is concomitant with their differentiation to an epithelial intermediate. Live imaging reveals anisotropic actomyosin contractility within epithelial trails that drives their peristaltic movement, and genetic loss of non-muscle myosin IIA-mediated actomyosin contractility results in dispersion of epithelial collectives and dramatic failure of normal MES migration. These findings demonstrate redundancy between cellular mechanisms of morphogenesis and reveal a crucial role for a unique form of collective epithelial migration during tissue fusion.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah L. W. Chong ◽  
Carine Rebeyrol ◽  
Ricardo J. José ◽  
Andrew E. Williams ◽  
Jeremy S. Brown ◽  
...  

Neutrophil migration into the airways is an important process to fight infection and is mediated by cell adhesion molecules. The intercellular adhesion molecules, ICAM-1 (CD54) and ICAM-2 (CD102) are known ligands for the neutrophil integrins, lymphocyte function associated antigen (LFA)-1 (αLβ2; CD11a/CD18), and macrophage-1 antigen (Mac-1;αMβ2;CD11b/CD18) and are implicated in leukocyte migration into the lung. However, it is ill-defined how neutrophils exit the lung and the role for ICAMs in trans-epithelial migration (TEpM) across the bronchial or alveolar epithelium. We found that human and murine alveolar epithelium expressed ICAM-1, whilst the bronchial epithelium expressed ICAM-2, and both were up-regulated during inflammatory stimulation in vitro and in inflammatory lung diseases such as cystic fibrosis. Although β2 integrins interacting with ICAM-1 and -2 mediated neutrophil migration across human bronchial epithelium in vitro, neither ICAM-2 nor LFA-1 binding of ICAM-1 mediated murine neutrophil migration into the lung or broncho-alveolar space during LPS-induced inflammation in vivo. Furthermore, TEpM of neutrophils themselves resulted in increased epithelial junctional permeability and reduced barrier function in vitro. This suggests that although β2 integrins interacting with ICAMs may regulate low levels of neutrophil traffic in healthy lung or early in inflammation when the epithelial barrier is intact; these interactions may be redundant later in inflammation when epithelial junctions are disrupted and no longer limit TEpM.


Author(s):  
Pengfei Lu ◽  
Yunzhe Lu

Bundled with various kinds of adhesion molecules and anchored to the basement membrane, the epithelium has historically been considered as an immotile tissue and, to migrate, it first needs to undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Since its initial description more than half a century ago, the EMT process has fascinated generations of developmental biologists and, more recently, cancer biologists as it is believed to be essential for not only embryonic development, organ formation, but cancer metastasis. However, recent progress shows that epithelium is much more motile than previously realized. Here, we examine the emerging themes in epithelial collective migration and how this has impacted our understanding of EMT.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shafali Gupta ◽  
Kinga Duszyc ◽  
Suzie Verma ◽  
Srikanth Budnar ◽  
Xuan Liang ◽  
...  

Epithelia migrate as physically coherent populations of cells. Earlier studies revealed that mechanical stress accumulates in these cellular layers as they move. These stresses are characteristically tensile in nature and have often been inferred to arise when moving cells pull upon the cell-cell adhesions that hold them together. We now report that epithelial tension at adherens junctions between migrating cells also increases due to an increase in RhoA-mediated junctional contractility. We find that active RhoA levels were stimulated by p114 RhoGEF at the junctions between migrating MCF-7 monolayers, and this was accompanied by increased levels of actomyosin and mechanical tension. Applying a strategy to restore active RhoA specifically at adherens junctions by manipulating its scaffold, anillin, we found that this junctional RhoA signal was necessary to stabilize junctional E-cadherin during epithelial migration and promoted orderly collective movement. We suggest that stabilization of E-cadherin by RhoA serves to increase cell-cell adhesion against the mechanical stresses of migration.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin Sherrard ◽  
Maureen Cetera ◽  
Sally Horne-Badovinac

Stress fibers (SFs) are actomyosin bundles commonly found in individually migrating cells in culture. However, whether and how cells use SFs to migrate in vivo or collectively is largely unknown. Studying the collective migration of the follicular epithelial cells in Drosophila, we found that the SFs in these cells show a novel treadmilling behavior that allows them to persist as the cells migrate over multiple cell lengths. Treadmilling SFs grow at their fronts by adding new integrin-based adhesions and actomyosin segments over time. This causes the SFs to have many internal adhesions along their lengths, instead of adhesions only at the ends. The front-forming adhesions remain stationary relative to the substrate and typically disassemble as the cell rear approaches. By contrast, a different type of adhesion forms at the terminus of the SF that slides with the trailing edge of the cell as the actomyosin ahead of it shortens. We further show that SF treadmilling depends on cell movement and identify a developmental switch in the formins that mediate SF assembly, with DAAM acting during migratory stages and Diaphanous acting during post-migratory stages. We propose that treadmilling SFs keep each cell on a linear trajectory, thereby promoting the collective motility required for epithelial migration.


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