| Literature DB >> 26009010 |
Mathieu Frechin1, Thomas Stoeger2, Stephan Daetwyler1, Charlotte Gehin3, Nico Battich2, Eva-Maria Damm4, Lilli Stergiou4, Howard Riezman3, Lucas Pelkmans1.
Abstract
Cells sense the context in which they grow to adapt their phenotype and allow multicellular patterning by mechanisms of autocrine and paracrine signalling. However, patterns also form in cell populations exposed to the same signalling molecules and substratum, which often correlate with specific features of the population context of single cells, such as local cell crowding. Here we reveal a cell-intrinsic molecular mechanism that allows multicellular patterning without requiring specific communication between cells. It acts by sensing the local crowding of a single cell through its ability to spread and activate focal adhesion kinase (FAK, also known as PTK2), resulting in adaptation of genes controlling membrane homeostasis. In cells experiencing low crowding, FAK suppresses transcription of the ABC transporter A1 (ABCA1) by inhibiting FOXO3 and TAL1. Agent-based computational modelling and experimental confirmation identified membrane-based signalling and feedback control as crucial for the emergence of population patterns of ABCA1 expression, which adapts membrane lipid composition to cell crowding and affects multiple signalling activities, including the suppression of ABCA1 expression itself. The simple design of this cell-intrinsic system and its broad impact on the signalling state of mammalian single cells suggests a fundamental role for a tunable membrane lipid composition in collective cell behaviour.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26009010 DOI: 10.1038/nature14429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962