A three-dimensional model of myxobacterial aggregation by contact-mediated interactions
Abstract
Myxobacteria provide one of the simplest models of cell-cell interaction and organized cell movement leading to cellular differentiation. When starved, tens of thousands of cells change their movement pattern from outward spreading to inward concentration; they form aggregates that become fruiting bodies. Cells inside fruiting bodies differentiate into round, nonmotile, environmentally resistant spores. Traditionally, cell aggregation has been considered to imply chemotaxis; a long-range cell interaction. However, myxobacterial aggregation is the consequence of direct cell-contact interactions, not chemotaxis. We present here a 3D stochastic lattice-gas cellular automata model of cell aggregation based on local cell-cell contact, and no chemotaxis. We demonstrate that a 3D discrete stochastic model can simulate two stages of cell aggregation. First, a “traffic jam” forms embedded in a field of motile cells. The jam then becomes an aggregation center that accumulates more cells. We show that, at high cell density, cells stream around the traffic jam, generating a 3D hemispherical mound. Later, when the nuclear traffic jam dissolves, the aggregation center becomes a 3D ring of streaming cells.
- Publication:
-
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science
- Pub Date:
- August 2005
- DOI:
- 10.1073/pnas.0504259102
- Bibcode:
- 2005PNAS..10211308S
- Keywords:
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- cell aggregation;
- cellular automata;
- collective behavior;
- myxobacteria;
- pattern formation;
- CELL BIOLOGY, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES