09:00 - 09:30
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Félix Benoist
(Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência)
Inherent contraction in bucklable fiber networks
Stress propagation in nonlinear media is crucial in cell biology, where molecular motors exert anisotropic force dipoles on the fibrous cytoskeleton. While the force dipoles can be either contractile or expansile, a medium made of fibers which buckle under compression rectifies these stresses towards a biologically crucial contraction. A general understanding of this rectification phenomenon as a function of the medium's elasticity is however lacking. Here we use theoretical continuum elasticity to show that rectification is actually a very general effect in nonlinear materials subjected to anisotropic internal stresses. We analytically show that both bucklable materials rectify small forces towards contraction. Using simulations, we moreover show that these results extend to larger forces.
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09:30 - 10:00
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Jonas Neipel
(Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems)
Geometry sensing by active flows: how the cell cortex can feel its shape
Morphogenesis involves the translation of patterns, often defined by the concentration of signalling molecules, into the shape of a cell or tissue. Robustness of such processes can be enhanced by feedbacks where the shape impacts back on the formation of the pattern. Here, we show that such shape sensing may result from the same forces that drive shape changes. We consider sheets of active matter, such as the cell cortex or developing tissue layers, that behave as active fluid surfaces on long time scales. In these systems, forces drive flows within the surface that inevitably depend on the surface geometry. In-plane torque dipoles, for example, drive flows only in the presence of curvature. When molecules are advected by this flow, a pattern arises, reflecting the symmetries of the geometry. In particular, we show that viscous shear forces result in an effective friction force being proportional to the Gaussian curvature, such that patches of contractile stresses are advected towards regions of minimal Gaussian curvature. On a surface with spherical topology, this implies that a contractile ring such as the cytokinetic ring aligns perpendicularly to the long axis of the surface. Hence, the actomyosin cortex can drive alignment of the division axis with the long axis of the cell by a rotation of the entire cell, consistent with recent experiments
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10:00 - 10:30
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Abhinav Singh
(Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics)
Spontaneous flow in confined 3D active fluids
Active fluids exhibit spontaneous flow under confinement and above a critical active stress. So far, this phenomenon has been extensively studied in two dimensions. Here. we study the dynamics of a 3D active fluid and characterize the spontaneous flow transition for various boundary conditions. Using perturbation analysis, we find that perpendicular anchoring permits an extensile Fredriks-type transition with in-plane and out-of-plane flows. Parallel anchoring allows for both an in-plane contractile transition, and an out-of-plane extensile wrinkling transition. We confirm the predicted transitions with high-fidelity numerical solutions of the nonlinear hydrodynamic equations describing active polar fluids. We then show numerically that 3D active fluids exhibit spatiotemporal chaos when further increasing active stresses, and we characterize the flow regimes between spontaneous flow and chaos. Our results demonstrate that 3D active fluids exhibit rich behavior that is not possible in two-dimensions.
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10:30 - 11:00
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Ali Tahaei
(Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems)
Biological tissues as living amorphous solids
Biological tissues are often described as viscoelastic fluids on long time-scales. However, on shorter time-scales, tissues can behave as amorphous solids, such as clay, changing shape only when exposed to a shear stress above the material yield stress $\Sigma_c$. Amorphous solids near $\Sigma_c$ display critical behaviour with a diverging correlation length-scale characterising dynamics of plastic activity. Here, we ask how would this critical behaviour be affected by active processes present in biological tissues, such as cell divisions.
In order to model yielding of biological tissues we employ the mesoscopic elasto-plastic model, commonly used to describe yielding of amorphous solids. Here, we extend the classical elasto-plastic model by introducing cell divisions as an additional source of plastic activity. We find that cell divisions strongly fluidise the solid phase of the system at stresses lower than $\Sigma_c$, consistent with literature. Furthermore, we find that critical behaviour is strongly suppressed, leading to localised dynamics of plastic activity nucleated by cell divisions. Finally, in our model, we can describe how well is the cell division orientation aligned with local shear stress. We find that low alignment strength leads to less mechanically stable tissues where most of the plastic flow arises from cell rearrangements, and vice versa.
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11:00 - 11:05
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group photo (to be published on the website of the event)
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11:05 - 11:30
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coffee break
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11:30 - 12:00
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Raj Kumar Sadhu
(Institut Curie)
Cells distinguish between concave and convex curvatures while migrating on curved surfaces
Cells often migrate on curved surfaces, that can be the curvature of extracellular matrix or the cylindrical protrusions by the other cell. Recent experiments provide clear evidence that motile cells are affected by the topography of the substrate on which they migrate. The origin and underlying mechanism that gives rise to this curvature sensitivity are not well understood. Here, we try to understand how a migrating cell sense and respond to such curvature cues using a theoretical framework as well as experiments performed on different cell types. We systematically study the cell migrating on different types of curved surfaces, such as on a sinusoidal substrate, outside or inside of a cylindrical substrate etc. We note that cell alignment and direction of migration are highly determined by the local curvature of the substrate: on the ridges (maxima) of a sinusoidal substrate, the cell prefers to align perpendicular to the axial direction, while on the grooves (minima), it prefers to align along the axis. While migrating from one groove to another, cells often cross the ridges with much higher angles (greater than $\pi/4$). The speed of the migrating cells show oscillatory behaviour as it migrates along the sinusoidal surface. On the outside (inside) of a cylindrical substrate, cells behave in a similar way as on the ridges (grooves) of a sinusoidal substrate, and explains the behaviour of cells migrating on sinusoidal surfaces within a simplified geometry of constant curvature.
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12:00 - 12:30
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Galia Montalvo Bereau
(Universität des Saarlandes)
Targeting microtubules for T-cell migration improvement
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are the key player in the adaptive immune system to eliminate tumorigenic and infected cells. The killing efficiency of CTLs can be, however, greatly impaired by dense extracellular matrix in solid tumors, because of reduced migratory capacity. The cytoskeleton plays a major role in regulating all types of cell motility. Among cytoskeletal components, microtubules (MTs) contribute to polarity maintenance, directional cell migration, and nuclear squeezing through mechanical barriers. The organization, positioning, and functions of MTs during cell migration greatly differ between slow-moving mesenchymal cells and fast-moving cells like leucocytes. In amoeboid fast-moving lymphocytes like T cells, MTs are enriched behind the nucleus and assembled in an MT organizing center (MTOC) during migration. However, the precise contribution of MTs dynamics in T-cell migration is only partially understood. We aim to characterize MTs as a major cytoskeletal component regulating the migration of CTLs in simplified micro-fabricated environments. The key question we would like to tackle here is whether MTs is a promising target to improve CTL migration and functionality using pharmaceutical approaches. To this end, we expose CTLs to MT disturbing drugs. We characterized the migratory proprieties of CTLs in self-manufactured micro-channels and in collagen matrix and we examined the impact of drug treatment on the killing capacity of CTLs in 3D. We found that both speed and persistence are increased in treated CTLs as well as the killing efficiency, mainly due to improved migration in 3D. Additionally, using a probe of real-time tubulin polymerization, SiR-tubulin, we describe the position of the MTOC during migration of CTLs in two scenarios with different constriction levels. We found that high confinement of the cells forces a polarization status that dictates faster and more persistent migration, linked to less freedom of the MTOC to rotate around the nucleus. Thus, we conclude that MT-network has a promising potential for therapeutic applications to improve CTL migration and killing efficiency, both in one- and three-dimensional scenarios.
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12:30 - 13:00
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Barbara Borges Fernandes
(Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia)
The minimal chemotactic cell
Cells and microorganisms like bacteria use chemotaxis to move in a directed manner in response to concentration gradients of nutrients and toxins. Likewise, synthetic delivery systems could take inspiration from nature to mimic this kind of transport. Ultimately, it could guide nanomotors in the body in a specific way, according to concentration gradients occurring physiologically. We present a system with the basic characteristics to achieve a minimal chemotactic cell. It consists of an asymmetric phospholipid vesicle of 100 nm (liposome) with an encapsulated enzyme (glucose oxidase). The asymmetry is given by the presence of pores in the membrane, inserted by the protein alpha-hemolysin. Mass ratios of 0.075 and 0.1 Hly/lipid were used, resulting in ~2 and ~3 pores per liposome. When the liposome is placed in an environment with glucose, the catalysed reaction occurs in its lumen. The products diffuse outwards through the pores, creating a local concentration gradient. The asymmetric distribution of products along its surface generates a slip velocity that moves the vesicle in response to the glucose concentration gradient. The active motion of the liposomes labelled with rhodamine octadecyl ester perchlorate (1%) was investigated in an Ibidi microfluidic device in which a concentration gradient of 0.05 M of glucose was established in the channel. While the pristine liposome and the one with encapsulated glucose oxidase (GOX-L) presented a velocity towards low glucose concentration, the displacement of liposomes with pores (~3) was reverted to the opposite direction. The movement of the pristine liposome and the GOX-L are due to diffusioosmophoresis, as a result of the interaction of glucose and the channel walls. In the absence of a glucose concentration gradient, vesicles present only Brownian motion. The drift velocity is the sum of the diffusioosmophoresis velocity and the chemotactic velocity. With ~2 pores, the chemotactic velocity is on the same order magnitude of the diffusioosmophoresis, cancelling out any drift movement. With ~3 pores, the chemotactic velocity suppresses the diffusioosmophoresis, resulting in a net drift towards high glucose concentrations.
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13:00 - 14:00
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lunch
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14:00 - 14:30
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discussion
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14:30 - 15:00
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Aline Tschanz
(EMBL Heidelberg)
Superresolution microscopy reveals partial preassembly and subsequent bending of the clathrin coat during endocytosis
Eukaryotic cells use clathrin-mediated endocytosis to take up a large range of extracellular cargos. During endocytosis, a clathrin coat forms on the plasma membrane, but it remains controversial when and how it is remodeled into a spherical vesicle.
Here, we use 3D superresolution microscopy to determine the precise geometry of the clathrin coat at large numbers of endocytic sites. Through pseudo-temporal sorting, we determine the average trajectory of clathrin remodeling during endocytosis. We find that clathrin coats assemble first on flat membranes to 50% of the coat area, before they become rapidly and continuously bent, and confirm this mechanism in three cell lines. We introduce the cooperative curvature model, which is based on positive feedback for curvature generation. It accurately describes the measured shapes and dynamics of the clathrin coat and could represent a general mechanism for clathrin coat remodeling on the plasma membrane.
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15:00 - 15:30
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Juan Manuel Garcia Arcos
(Université de Genève)
Reconstruction of membrane tension gradients in vitro
Lipid bilayers are highly fluid. This unique property determines many of the mechanical properties of cellular membranes, in particular the fast equilibration of membrane tension on every point of their surface. Thus, at the size of single cells, no membrane tension gradient is theoretically expected to arise. Paradoxically, reports have shown that in neurons (Dai and Sheetz, 1995) and migrating cells, a membrane tension gradient exists, and participates to the force dipole required for movement (Hetmanski et al., 2019; Lieber et al., 2015; Mueller et al., 2017). Other works proposed that in non-migratory cells tension fluctuations rapidly dissipated and are only local (Shi et al., 2018). This raises the question on what sets the length scale of force propagation in cells (Cohen and Shi, 2020), which is crucial to understand how membrane tension gradients are formed and maintained. Here, we reconstitute membrane tension gradients in vitro using supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) expanding on a glass surface, as a proof-of-principle experiment for the study of tension dissipation in membranes. We show that in expanding SLBs a tension gradient exists and it can be measured by flipper-TR, a FLIM probe sensitive to lipid packing. The speed of the expansion correlates with the tension gradient: if the tension is higher at the leading edge, the expansion is faster; if the tension homogenizes, the expansion stalls. We compare this to migrating cells and especulate on what parameters are important to maintain a gradient across a lipid bilayer.
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15:30 - 16:00
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Julian Weninger
(Université de Genève)
Junctional heterogeneity drives positional and orientational order in auditory epithelia
The auditory organ of chick, called the basilar papilla, comprises of two terminally differentiated cells: sensory hair cells and non-sensory support cells. In prenatal development, these cells arrange into a highly regular pattern where hair cells stand isolated from each other separated by support cells. This patterning of the hair cells becomes even more pronounced as the apical surface area of the hair cells increases 10-fold. We suggest that non-muscle myosin, found to be located at certain junctions, drives this regular packing by active contraction. Here, we use a mathematical vertex model, that considers mechanical forces at the scale of single cells and cellular junctions, to identify the contributions of forces, that are expressed in precise patterns by cells, to the process of cellular rearrangement. Active forces of cell size regulation and myosin contraction stand in contrast to global shear forces, which are known to be involved in similar processes of tissue reorganisation but are experimentally only observed to a limited extend in the basilar papilla.
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16:00 - 16:30
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coffee break
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16:30 - 17:00
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Hsiang-Ying Chen
(Institut Curie)
Myoblasts mound formation on defect topography
Myoblasts are undifferentiated muscle cells with elongated cell shape. Recently, it has been shown that, at defect site, myoblasts can form bilayers in confluent layers [ \,1] \, and three-dimensional ( \,3D) \, cell mound in a small circular confinement [ \,2] \,. However, the role played by topological defects in 3D cell organization remains elusive. Here, we investigate how C2C12 myoblast monolayers form mounds on defect microstructures in the form of concentric circle, mimicking +1 defect. Myoblasts exhibit contact guidance along the micro rails of the concentric pattern. With time increases, cell proliferation causes density to increase. Above a critical density, myoblasts spontaneously extrude from the defect site, forming multicellular mounds. The system experiences a global transition from azimuthal flow ( \,along the rails) \, to radial flow ( \,perpendicular to them) \, toward the defect site, which feeds and sustain the growing 3D cell mounds. Cells then exhibit vortex-type orientation that evolves in other geometries as the structure develops. Subsequent layers exhibit aster-type geometry and vortex/spiral configurations at the top of the 3D cell mound.
\textbf{References}
[ \,1] \, T. Sarkar, V. Yashunsky, L. Brézin, C. Blanch-Mercader, T. Aryaksama, M. Lacroix, T. Risler, J.-F. Joanny, P. Silberzan, bioRxiv 2021.06.22.449403. (2021)
[ \,2] \, P. Guillamat, C. Blanch-Mercader, G. Pernollet, K. Kruse, and A. Roux, Nat. Mater. \textbf{21}, 588 (2022).
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17:00 - 17:30
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Fotis Avgidis
(AMOLF)
Near-critical tuning of cooperativity revealed by spontaneous switching in a protein signalling array
Dynamic properties of allosteric complexes are crucial for signal processing by diverse cellular networks. However, direct observations of switches between distinct signaling states have been limited to compact molecular assemblies of fixed size. Here, we report in vivo FRET measurements of spontaneous discrete-level fluctuations in the activity of the Escherichia coli chemosensory array - an extensive membrane-associated assembly comprising thousands of molecules. Finite-size scaling analysis of the temporal statistics by a two-dimensional conformational spread model revealed nearest-neighbor coupling within 3$\%$ of the Ising second-order transition, indicating that chemosensory arrays are poised at criticality. Our analysis yields estimates for the intrinsic timescale of conformational changes (12-35 ms) of allosteric units, and identifies near-critical tuning as a design principle for balancing the inherent tradeoff between response amplitude and response speed in higher-order signaling assemblies. These results demonstrate the power of using fluctuation signatures of protein complexes to understand their function.
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17:30 - 18:00
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Arthur Genthon
(Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems)
Analytical cell size distribution: lineage-population bias and parameter inference
In the past decade, new microfluidic devices have been designed to monitor single lineages of cells for many generations with great precision. In classical bulk cultures where the full population is grown, cells with high reproductive success lead to larger populations of offsprings, while no such selection effect is present in single-lineage experiments.
In this work, we ask two questions: What is the lineage-population statistical bias for the cell size distribution? Can we learn the laws of cell growth and division from single-lineage steady state size distributions?
To do so, we derive analytical steady-state cell size lineage distributions for size-controlled cells. These distributions are compared to population distributions, and the role of stochasticity, both in single-cell growth and in volume partitioning at division, is explored.
In addition, in simple cases, analytical distributions are fitted to Escherichia coli data in order to infer the parameters of the model, such as the single-cell growth rate, the strength of the size control or the asymmetry of division.
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18:00 - 18:30
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discussion
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18:30 - 19:30
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dinner
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19:30 - 21:00
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poster session - focus on even poster numbers
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