A flagellate-to-amoeboid switch in the closest living relatives of animals
Posted on: 30 July 2020 , updated on: 6 August 2020
Preprint posted on 28 June 2020
Article now published in eLife at http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.61037
Categories: cell biology, evolutionary biology
Context:
There is an increasing understanding of the plasticity in eukaryotic cells where cells modulate and switch between different modes of migration. Only recently have we begun to understand how cells attain this plasticity. It has been depicted that the protozoan ancestors of eukaryotes have genetic programs that are required for these different modalities and the evolution of differentiated forms of crawling cells.
Major findings:
Authors report through fortuitous discovery that choanoflagellate Salpingoeca rosetta trans-differentiates from flagellate state to amoeboid state similar to what has been reported in a wide variety of eukaryotic cells. Like many reports in eukaryotic cells, S. rosetta when confined below 3 microns elicited protrusions and increasing confinement lead to switching to amoeboid phenotype. Inhibiting actin polymerization and myosin II prevented the formation of protrusions under confinement. Similar to animal cells undergoing bleb-based migration, the protrusions formed by S.rosetta under confinement were devoid of actin while expanding and were filled with actin during retraction, suggesting these protrusions to be blebs.
Authors suggest that this amoeboid switch might be essential for choanoflagellates as an escape mechanism. In a heterogeneous environment of confined and less confined spaces, cells would bleb and once the protrusions come in contact with non-confined spaces, cells attain an elongated shape and manage to escape. The amoeboid switch behavior is conserved across many branches of choanoflagellate suggesting the ancestral role of this behavior. How this is conserved and evolved across many different species remains elusive.
What I like about this preprint:
Along with my personal interest towards understanding how cells attain different modes of migration and morphology with a changing micro-environment that surrounds the cells, this preprint highlights that this morphological plasticity is conserved across many different relatives of animals. We have just begun to understand how cells attain this plasticity. Another important feature that is highlighted in this study is the use of amoeboid or bleb-like protrusions for the escape mechanism. Interestingly, a similar mechanism is used by cancer cells to move in a complex microenvironment. Cancer cells with higher contractility can utilize the formation of blebs to move in a dense matrix or confined environments to metastasize. It would be interesting to see if similar mechano-chemical mechanisms are conserved in choanoflagellate versus other types of animal cells undergoing bleb based migration.
My questions to the authors:
- Authors show that microtubule depolymerization induces blebbing in S. rosetta, even in the absence of confinement, this is attributed to the microtubule distribution under the plasma membrane wherein amoeboid cells, microtubules detach from the plasma membrane providing free zone to experience higher contractility and undergo blebbing. I was wondering if microtubule depolymerization might be concomitant with an increase in the overall contractility of the cells as it is seen in the animal cells with the release of GEFs?
- Authors observe a variety of morphologies when various choanoflagellates are subjected to confinement, ranging from large blebs, lobopodia, or no morphological change. Could this also be attributed to the intrinsic contractility of these choanoflagellates?
- One of the interesting observations made in this study was the maintenance of apical-basal polarity after the loss of flagella under confinement. When the confinement is removed, rosetta develops the flagella at the same location. Do authors have any notion about how cells maintain the memory of apical-basal polarity under confinement and are this reflected in the formation and localization of blebs?
- One of the open questions raised by the authors is the involvement of the mechano-transduction pathway that might be involved in the detection of confinement and responses to it. I wonder if authors believe this is purely mechanical or might involve activation of certain pathways that control the contractility in these cells.
References-
Lomakin, A. J. et al. The nucleus acts as a ruler tailoring cell responses to spatial constraints. bioRxiv (2019). doi:10.1101/863514
Kopf, A. et al. Microtubules control cellular shape and coherence in amoeboid migrating cells. J. Cell Biol. 219, e201907154 (2020).
Ruprecht V, Wieser S, Callan-Jones A, et al. Cortical contractility triggers a stochastic switch to fast amoeboid cell motility. Cell. 2015;160(4):673-685. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2015.01.008
Liu YJ, Le Berre M, Lautenschlaeger F, et al. Confinement and low adhesion induce fast amoeboid migration of slow mesenchymal cells. Cell. 2015;160(4):659-672. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2015.01.007
doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/prelights.23619
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