Frictiotaxis underlies focal adhesion-independent durotaxis

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Adam Shellard - , University College London (Author)
  • Kai Weißenbruch - , University College London (Author)
  • Peter A.E. Hampshire - , Max-Planck-Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Center for Systems Biology Dresden (CSBD) (Author)
  • Namid R. Stillman - , University College London (Author)
  • Christina L. Dix - , The Francis Crick Institute (Author)
  • Richard Thorogate - , University College London (Author)
  • Albane Imbert - , The Francis Crick Institute (Author)
  • Guillaume Charras - , University College London (Author)
  • Ricard Alert - , Max-Planck-Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Center for Systems Biology Dresden (CSBD), Clusters of Excellence PoL: Physics of Life (Author)
  • Roberto Mayor - , University College London, Universidad Mayor (Author)

Abstract

Cells move directionally along gradients of substrate stiffness — a process called durotaxis. In the situations studied so far, durotaxis relies on cell-substrate focal adhesions to sense stiffness and transmit forces that drive directed motion. However, whether and how durotaxis can take place in the absence of focal adhesions remains unclear. Here, we show that confined cells can perform durotaxis despite lacking focal adhesions. This durotactic migration depends on an asymmetric myosin distribution and actomyosin retrograde flow. We propose that the mechanism of this focal adhesion-independent durotaxis is that stiffer substrates offer higher friction. We put forward a physical model that predicts that non-adherent cells polarise and migrate towards regions of higher friction — a process that we call frictiotaxis. We demonstrate frictiotaxis in experiments by showing that cells migrate up a friction gradient even when stiffness is uniform. Our results broaden the potential of durotaxis to guide any cell that contacts a substrate, and they reveal a mode of directed migration based on friction. These findings have implications for cell migration during development, immune response and cancer progression, which usually takes place in confined environments that favour adhesion-independent amoeboid migration.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number3811
JournalNature communications
Volume16
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 23 Apr 2025
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 40268931