Cell migration directionality and speed are independently regulated by RasG and Gβ in Dictyostelium cells in electrotaxis

Author:

Jeon Taeck J.1ORCID,Gao Runchi2ORCID,Kim Hyeseon1ORCID,Lee Ara1ORCID,Jeon Pyeonghwa1ORCID,Devreotes Peter N.3ORCID,Zhao Min4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology & BK21-Plus Research Team for Bioactive Control Technology, College of Natural Sciences, Chosun University, Gwangju 61452, Republic of Korea

2. School of life science, Yunnan Normal University, Kunming, Yunnan 650500, China

3. Department of Cell Biology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA

4. Departments of Dermatology and Ophthalmology, Institute for Regenerative Cures, School of Medicine, University of California at Davis, CA 95817, USA

Abstract

Motile cells manifest increased migration speed and directionality in gradients of stimuli, including chemoattractants, electrical potential, and substratum stiffness. Here, we demonstrate that Dictyostelium cells move directionally in response to an electric field with specific acceleration/deceleration kinetics of directionality and migration speed. Detailed analyses of the migration kinetics suggest that migration speed and directionality are separately regulated by Gβ and RasG, respectively, in EF-directed cell migration. Cells lacking Gβ, which is essential for all chemotactic responses in Dictyostelium, showed EF-directed cell migration with the same increase in directionality in an EF as wild-type cells. However, these cells failed to show induction of the migration speed upon EF stimulation as much as wild-type cells. Loss of RasG, a key regulator of chemoattractant-directed cell migration, resulted in almost complete loss of directionality, but similar acceleration/deceleration kinetics of migration speed as wild-type cells. These results indicate that Gβ and RasG are required for the induction of migration speed and directionality, respectively, in response to an EF, suggesting separation of migration speed and directionality even with intact feedback loops between mechanical and signaling networks.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Education, Science and Technology

National Science Foundation

Air Force Office of Scientific Research

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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