Summary of ssbd-repos-000111

SSBD:database
URL

Name
ssbd-repos-000111 (111-Kawaguchi-NPCellsDyn)
URL
DOI
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Title
Time-lapse and fluorescent images of collectice dynamics of neural progenitor cells (NPCs)
Description
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Submited Date
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Release Date
2019-11-20
Updated Date
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License
Funding information
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File formats
Data size
15.7 GB

Organism
M. musculus
Strain
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Cell Line
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Genes
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Proteins
H2B

GO Molecular Function (MF)
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GO Biological Process (BP)
interkinetic nuclear migration
GO Cellular Component (CC)
nucleus
Study Type
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Imaging Methods
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Method Summary
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Related paper(s)

Kyogo Kawaguchi, Ryoichiro Kageyama, Masaki Sano (2017) Topological defects control collective dynamics in neural progenitor cell cultures., Nature, Volume 545, Number 7654, pp. 327-331

Published in 2017 Apr 12 (Electronic publication in April 12, 2017, midnight )

(Abstract) Cultured stem cells have become a standard platform not only for regenerative medicine and developmental biology but also for biophysical studies. Yet, the characterization of cultured stem cells at the level of morphology and of the macroscopic patterns resulting from cell-to-cell interactions remains largely qualitative. Here we report on the collective dynamics of cultured murine neural progenitor cells (NPCs), which are multipotent stem cells that give rise to cells in the central nervous system. At low densities, NPCs moved randomly in an amoeba-like fashion. However, NPCs at high density elongated and aligned their shapes with one another, gliding at relatively high velocities. Although the direction of motion of individual cells reversed stochastically along the axes of alignment, the cells were capable of forming an aligned pattern up to length scales similar to that of the migratory stream observed in the adult brain. The two-dimensional order of alignment within the culture showed a liquid-crystalline pattern containing interspersed topological defects with winding numbers of +1/2 and -1/2 (half-integer due to the nematic feature that arises from the head-tail symmetry of cell-to-cell interaction). We identified rapid cell accumulation at +1/2 defects and the formation of three-dimensional mounds. Imaging at the single-cell level around the defects allowed us to quantify the velocity field and the evolving cell density; cells not only concentrate at +1/2 defects, but also escape from -1/2 defects. We propose a generic mechanism for the instability in cell density around the defects that arises from the interplay between the anisotropic friction and the active force field.

Contact(s)
Kyogo Kawaguchi
Organization(s)
RIKEN , Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research , Nonequilibrium physics of living matter RIKEN Hakubi Research Team
Image Data Contributors
Quantitative Data Contributors

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