Autologous chemotaxis, in which cells secrete and detect molecules to determine the direction of fluid flow, is thwarted at high cell density because molecules from other cells interfere with a given cell's signal. Using a minimal model of autologous chemotaxis, we determine the cell density at which sensing fails and find that it agrees with experimental observations of metastatic cancer cells. To understand this agreement, we derive a physical limit to autologous chemotaxis in terms of the cell density, the P\'eclet number, and the length scales of the cell and its environment. Surprisingly, in an environment that is uniformly oversaturated in the signaling molecule, we find that sensing not only can fail, but can be reversed, causing bac...
Directed cell motion in response to an external chemical gradient occurs in many biological phenomen...
Differential movement of individual cells within tissues is an important yet poorly understood proce...
Collective cell movement is a key component of many important biological processes, including wound ...
Cell chemotaxis is crucial to many biological functions including development, wound healing, and ca...
Cell chemotaxis is crucial to many biological functions including development, wound healing, and ca...
In contexts ranging from embryonic development to bacterial ecology, cell populations migrate chemot...
Summary: Chemotaxis is ubiquitous in many biological processes, but it still remains elusive how cel...
How signals coordinate and direct chemotaxis is an issue that is actively investigated. A new study ...
Motility is a fundamental cellular behavior that is often prompted by environmental changes and/or s...
Chemoattractant gradients are usually considered in terms of sources and sinks that are independent ...
Chemotaxis is fundamentally important, but the sources of gradients in vivo are rarely well understo...
Eukaryotic chemotaxis involves distinct cell shapes, with movement in shallow gradients dominated by...
Chemotaxis is typically modeled in the context of cellular motion toward a static, exogenous source ...
Small chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoattractant...
Cell size is thought to play an important role in choosing between temporal and spatial sensing in c...
Directed cell motion in response to an external chemical gradient occurs in many biological phenomen...
Differential movement of individual cells within tissues is an important yet poorly understood proce...
Collective cell movement is a key component of many important biological processes, including wound ...
Cell chemotaxis is crucial to many biological functions including development, wound healing, and ca...
Cell chemotaxis is crucial to many biological functions including development, wound healing, and ca...
In contexts ranging from embryonic development to bacterial ecology, cell populations migrate chemot...
Summary: Chemotaxis is ubiquitous in many biological processes, but it still remains elusive how cel...
How signals coordinate and direct chemotaxis is an issue that is actively investigated. A new study ...
Motility is a fundamental cellular behavior that is often prompted by environmental changes and/or s...
Chemoattractant gradients are usually considered in terms of sources and sinks that are independent ...
Chemotaxis is fundamentally important, but the sources of gradients in vivo are rarely well understo...
Eukaryotic chemotaxis involves distinct cell shapes, with movement in shallow gradients dominated by...
Chemotaxis is typically modeled in the context of cellular motion toward a static, exogenous source ...
Small chemotactic cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils transduce shallow spatial chemoattractant...
Cell size is thought to play an important role in choosing between temporal and spatial sensing in c...
Directed cell motion in response to an external chemical gradient occurs in many biological phenomen...
Differential movement of individual cells within tissues is an important yet poorly understood proce...
Collective cell movement is a key component of many important biological processes, including wound ...