| Literature DB >> 30255333 |
Benjamin Mattes1, Steffen Scholpp2.
Abstract
Cells of multicellular organisms are in continuous conversation with the neighbouring cells. The sender cells signal the receiver cells to influence their behaviour in transport, metabolism, motility, division, and growth. How cells communicate with each other can be categorized by biochemical signalling processes, which can be characterised by the distance between the sender cell and the receiver cell. Existing classifications describe autocrine signals as those where the sender cell is identical to the receiver cell. Complementary to this scenario, paracrine signalling describes signalling between a sender cell and a different receiver cell. Finally, juxtacrine signalling describes the exchange of information between adjacent cells by direct cell contact, whereas endocrine signalling describes the exchange of information, e.g., by hormones between distant cells or even organs through the bloodstream. In the last two decades, however, an unexpected communication mechanism has been identified which uses cell protrusions to exchange chemical signals by direct contact over long distances. These signalling protrusions can deliver signals in both ways, from sender to receiver and vice versa. We are starting to understand the morphology and function of these signalling protrusions in many tissues and this accumulation of findings forces us to revise our view of contact-dependent cell communication. In this review, we will focus on the two main categories of signalling protrusions, cytonemes and tunnelling nanotubes. These signalling protrusions emerge as essential structural components of a vibrant communication network in the development and tissue homeostasis of any multicellular organism.Entities:
Keywords: Contact-dependent signalling; Cytoneme; Hedgehog; Paracrine signalling; Trafficking; Tunnelling nanotubes; Wnt
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30255333 PMCID: PMC6182708 DOI: 10.1007/s00418-018-1732-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Histochem Cell Biol ISSN: 0948-6143 Impact factor: 4.304
Fig. 1Structure and function of cytonemes and tunnelling nanotubes. a Live imaging of Wnt8a-GFP expressing cells and membrane-mCherry expressing zebrafish cells in vivo. Wnt8a-GFP positive cytonemes extend from the source cell to contact unlabelled adjacent cells. a’ 3D reconstruction demonstrates the tip localization of the signalling proteins and the interaction with adjacent cells (dotted line). b Atto488 α-syn fibrils inside TNTs, labelled with WGA rodamine. (Saida Abounit and Chiara Zurzolo, unpublished figure). b’ Labelled molecules are transported inside the nanotube. c Cytonemes generate a unidirectional signalling gradient by delivering or receiving signalling components. c’ Cytonemes consist of thin F-actin bundles and generally rely on ligand–receptor interactions. d TNTs can build seamless and stable bi-directional transfer bridges between cells. d’ Depending on the context and the delivered cargo, TNTs are composed of F-actin in conjunction with microtubules. White scale bars in a, a’ and b 10 µm, yellow scale bar in b’ 1 µm
Observations of cytonemes and TNTs in vitro and in vivo
| Cell type and organism | Transmitted signals and cargo | Function | Size: length; diameter | Cytoskeleton element | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cytonemes | ||||||
| In cell culture | ||||||
| Xenopus fibroblasts | Wnt2b–EGFP | Wnt secretion | n/a | Actin and microtubules | Holzer et al. ( | |
| Mouse C3H/10T1/2 mesenchymal cells | FGF: FGFR elongation via cytonemes | FGF reception | Up to > 60 µm; n/a | Actin | Koizumi et al. ( | |
| Zebrafish pigment cells | Membrane-associated signal to trigger depolarization | Pigment pattern formation | 20–30 µm; n/a | Actin | Hamada et at. ( | |
| In tissue | ||||||
| Wing disc tracheal cells or peripodial layer of the eye disc | Dpp/Tkv; Spi/EgfR reception | Imaginal disc pattering | Up to > 80 µm; 200 nm | Actin | Sato and Kornberg et al. ( | |
| Drosophila myoblasts | Wg/Fzd uptake and delta/notch interaction | Relay system for Wg and Notch signals | Up to 25 µm; 200 nm | Actin | Huang and Kornberg ( | |
| Drosophila germ cells | Dpp transport | Maintenance of stem cells | Up to 4 µm | Microtubules | Inaba et al. ( | |
| Basal cytonemes in the Drosophila wing pouch | Hh/patched reception | Imaginal disc pattering | Up to 70 µm; n/a | Actin | Bischoff et al. ( | |
| Zebrafish neural plate | Wnt transport to Fzd/Lrp6 containing cells | Neuroectoderm AP patterning | Up to 50 µm; <1.5 µm | Actin | Stanganello et al. ( | |
| Chick limb bud | Shh ligand caintaining cytonemes connect Cdo and Boc coreceptors cytonemes | Patterning of mesenchymal cells | Up to 150 µm; 200 nm | Actin | Sanders et al. ( | |
| Tunnelling nanotubes | ||||||
| In cell culture | ||||||
| Primary rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) | Membrane vesicles, membrane-anchored proteins, and small organelles | Intercellular transfer of cellular components | Thin: 20 µm; 70–200 nm | Actin | Rustom et al. ( | |
| Primary rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) | Mitochondria and intracellular vesicles such as endosomes and lysosomes | Recovery mechanism for stressed cells | Thick: n/a; > 700 nm | Actin and microtubules | Wang and Gerdes ( | |
| Human monocyte-derived macrophages | Mitochondria and intracellular vesicles | Intercellular transfer of cellular components | Thick: n/a; > 700 nm | Actin and microtubules | Onfelt et al. ( | |
| Humanperipheral blood NK cells, macrophages, and B cells | Bacteria ; GFP-tagged cell surface class I MHC protein | Communication mechanism in immunology | 10–50 µm; <700 nm | Actin | Onfelt et al. ( | |
| Between adult human endothelial progenitor cells and neonatal rat cardiomyocytes | Mitochondria, soluble GFP | Cell fate decisions in adult progenitor cells | Up to 120 µm; 50–800 nm | Actin | Koyanagi et al. ( | |
| Neuronal CAD cells and between astrocytes to granule neurons | PrPSC prions | Propagation of infectious particles | Up to 80 µm; 180–800 nm | Actin | Gousset et al. ( | |
| NRK cells, HEK293, HUVEC, and NCC | Electrical signals | Electrical coupling via gap junctions | Up to 70 µm; 50–200 nm | Actin | Wang et al. ( | |
| In tissue | ||||||
| Neural Crest cells in chick embryos | Cytoplasmic material; cytosolic and membrane-tethered fluorescent proteins | Delivering positional information during migration | Up to 100 µm; 0.5–2 µm | N/a | Teddy and Kulesa ( | |
| Gastrulating zebrafish embryo cells | Cytosolic and membrane-tethered fluorescent proteins | Cell–cell communication during gastrulation | Up to 350 µm; <1 µm | Actin; tubulin only in proximal part | Caneparo et al. ( | |
| Myeloid cells in the mouse cornea | Smaller molecules such as MHC and/or MHC-antigen complexes | Immunological response | > 300 µm; 200–300 nm | Actin; n/a | Chinnery et al. ( | |
| Patient-derived malignant pleural mesothelioma | Organelles and other cytosolic components | Role in pathogenesis and invasion | Up to 100–200 µm; n/a | Actin; n/a | Lou et al. ( | |