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STICCS Reveals Matrix-Dependent Adhesion Slipping and Gripping in?Migrating Cells
Authors:Tim Toplak  Elvis Pandzic  Lingfeng Chen  Miguel Vicente-Manzanares  Alan?Rick Horwitz  Paul?W Wiseman
Institution:Department of Physics, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada;Department of Chemistry, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, Canada;Department of Cell Biology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia;§Ramón y Cajal Program, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain
Abstract:Two-color spatio-temporal image cross-correlation spectroscopy (STICCS) is a new, to our knowledge, image analysis method that calculates space-time autocorrelation and cross-correlation functions from fluorescence intensity fluctuations. STICCS generates cellular flow and diffusion maps that reveal interactions and cotransport of two distinct molecular species labeled with different fluorophores. Here we use computer simulations to map the capabilities and limitations of STICCS for measurements in complex heterogeneous environments containing micro- and macrostructures. We then use STICCS to analyze the co-flux of adhesion components in migrating cells imaged using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. The data reveal a robust, time-dependent co-fluxing of certain integrins and paxillin in adhesions in protrusions when they pause, and in adhesions that are sliding and disassembling, demonstrating that the molecules in these adhesions move as a complex. In these regions, both α6β1- or αLβ2-integrins, expressed in CHO.B2 cells, co-flux with paxillin; an analogous cotransport was seen for α6β1-integrin and α-actinin in U2OS. This contrasts with the behavior of the α5β1-integrin and paxillin, which do not co-flux. Our results clearly show that integrins can move in complexes with adhesion proteins in protrusions that are retracting.
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