Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.

The formation of gaps in the endothelium is a crucial process underlying both cancer and immune cell extravasation, contributing to the functioning of the immune system during infection, the unfavorable development of chronic inflammation and tumor metastasis. Here, we present a stochastic-mechanica...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jorge Escribano, Michelle B Chen, Emad Moeendarbary, Xuan Cao, Vivek Shenoy, Jose Manuel Garcia-Aznar, Roger D Kamm, Fabian Spill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-05-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006395
id doaj-23b2b81df548466695ac8ade7b6edff9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-23b2b81df548466695ac8ade7b6edff92021-04-21T15:13:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582019-05-01155e100639510.1371/journal.pcbi.1006395Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.Jorge EscribanoMichelle B ChenEmad MoeendarbaryXuan CaoVivek ShenoyJose Manuel Garcia-AznarRoger D KammFabian SpillThe formation of gaps in the endothelium is a crucial process underlying both cancer and immune cell extravasation, contributing to the functioning of the immune system during infection, the unfavorable development of chronic inflammation and tumor metastasis. Here, we present a stochastic-mechanical multiscale model of an endothelial cell monolayer and show that the dynamic nature of the endothelium leads to spontaneous gap formation, even without intervention from the transmigrating cells. These gaps preferentially appear at the vertices between three endothelial cells, as opposed to the border between two cells. We quantify the frequency and lifetime of these gaps, and validate our predictions experimentally. Interestingly, we find experimentally that cancer cells also preferentially extravasate at vertices, even when they first arrest on borders. This suggests that extravasating cells, rather than initially signaling to the endothelium, might exploit the autonomously forming gaps in the endothelium to initiate transmigration.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006395
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jorge Escribano
Michelle B Chen
Emad Moeendarbary
Xuan Cao
Vivek Shenoy
Jose Manuel Garcia-Aznar
Roger D Kamm
Fabian Spill
spellingShingle Jorge Escribano
Michelle B Chen
Emad Moeendarbary
Xuan Cao
Vivek Shenoy
Jose Manuel Garcia-Aznar
Roger D Kamm
Fabian Spill
Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Jorge Escribano
Michelle B Chen
Emad Moeendarbary
Xuan Cao
Vivek Shenoy
Jose Manuel Garcia-Aznar
Roger D Kamm
Fabian Spill
author_sort Jorge Escribano
title Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.
title_short Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.
title_full Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.
title_fullStr Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.
title_full_unstemmed Balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.
title_sort balance of mechanical forces drives endothelial gap formation and may facilitate cancer and immune-cell extravasation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2019-05-01
description The formation of gaps in the endothelium is a crucial process underlying both cancer and immune cell extravasation, contributing to the functioning of the immune system during infection, the unfavorable development of chronic inflammation and tumor metastasis. Here, we present a stochastic-mechanical multiscale model of an endothelial cell monolayer and show that the dynamic nature of the endothelium leads to spontaneous gap formation, even without intervention from the transmigrating cells. These gaps preferentially appear at the vertices between three endothelial cells, as opposed to the border between two cells. We quantify the frequency and lifetime of these gaps, and validate our predictions experimentally. Interestingly, we find experimentally that cancer cells also preferentially extravasate at vertices, even when they first arrest on borders. This suggests that extravasating cells, rather than initially signaling to the endothelium, might exploit the autonomously forming gaps in the endothelium to initiate transmigration.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006395
work_keys_str_mv AT jorgeescribano balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
AT michellebchen balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
AT emadmoeendarbary balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
AT xuancao balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
AT vivekshenoy balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
AT josemanuelgarciaaznar balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
AT rogerdkamm balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
AT fabianspill balanceofmechanicalforcesdrivesendothelialgapformationandmayfacilitatecancerandimmunecellextravasation
_version_ 1714667613241475072