Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2205213 Trends in Cell Biology 2007 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Some cells migrate and find their way as solitary entities. However, during development of multicellular animals and possibly during tumor dissemination, cells often move as groups, associated tightly or loosely. Recent advances in live imaging have aided examination of such ‘multicellular cell biology’. Here, I propose a model for how a group of cells can process and react to guidance information as a unit rather than as a gathering of solitary cells. Signaling pathways and regulatory mechanisms can differ substantially between solitary- and collective-guidance modes; a major difference being that, in collective guidance, similar to in bacterial chemotaxis, the signal need not be localized subcellularly within the responding cell. I suggest that collective-guidance signaling occurs alongside individual cell reactions. Both produce directional migration.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cell Biology
Authors
,