20 research outputs found

    Prospectus, November 14, 2019

    Get PDF
    ART THEATER PERMANENTLY CLOSES; Veteran seeks academic redemption within Parkland College; A passion to see others succeed; Rantoul hosts Punkin Chunkin\u27 Championship at Chanute Airforce Base; Punkin Chunkin\u27 Championship at Chanute Airforce Base; Opinion: Rising sea levels; Intense debate over holiday decorations; Parkland Ensembles have busy end to semesterhttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_2019/1049/thumbnail.jp

    Actin–myosin network reorganization breaks symmetry at the cell rear to spontaneously initiate polarized cell motility

    Get PDF
    We have analyzed the spontaneous symmetry breaking and initiation of actin-based motility in keratocytes (fish epithelial cells). In stationary keratocytes, the actin network flow was inwards and radially symmetric. Immediately before motility initiation, the actin network flow increased at the prospective cell rear and reoriented in the perinuclear region, aligning with the prospective axis of movement. Changes in actin network flow at the cell front were detectable only after cell polarization. Inhibition of myosin II or Rho kinase disrupted actin network organization and flow in the perinuclear region and decreased the motility initiation frequency, whereas increasing myosin II activity with calyculin A increased the motility initiation frequency. Local stimulation of myosin activity in stationary cells by the local application of calyculin A induced directed motility initiation away from the site of stimulation. Together, these results indicate that large-scale actin–myosin network reorganization and contractility at the cell rear initiate spontaneous symmetry breaking and polarized motility of keratocytes

    An Adhesion-Dependent Switch between Mechanisms That Determine Motile Cell Shape

    Get PDF
    Keratocytes are fast-moving cells in which adhesion dynamics are tightly coupled to the actin polymerization motor that drives migration, resulting in highly coordinated cell movement. We have found that modifying the adhesive properties of the underlying substrate has a dramatic effect on keratocyte morphology. Cells crawling at intermediate adhesion strengths resembled stereotypical keratocytes, characterized by a broad, fan-shaped lamellipodium, clearly defined leading and trailing edges, and persistent rates of protrusion and retraction. Cells at low adhesion strength were small and round with highly variable protrusion and retraction rates, and cells at high adhesion strength were large and asymmetrical and, strikingly, exhibited traveling waves of protrusion. To elucidate the mechanisms by which adhesion strength determines cell behavior, we examined the organization of adhesions, myosin II, and the actin network in keratocytes migrating on substrates with different adhesion strengths. On the whole, our results are consistent with a quantitative physical model in which keratocyte shape and migratory behavior emerge from the self-organization of actin, adhesions, and myosin, and quantitative changes in either adhesion strength or myosin contraction can switch keratocytes among qualitatively distinct migration regimes

    Development of the Over-Water Mist Net Support System: A Novel Ecological Research Tool

    No full text
    corecore