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Cells Dev ; 169: 203726, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34450344

ABSTRACT

Animal cells are amazing examples of decentralized systems: By interchanging information about their position and internal state, cells coordinate their behavior and organize themselves in time and space. Examples of this behavior are the development of an embryo or of an organoid. In this work we have asked which are the "rules of intercellular relationship" that allow the organization of an abstract cell collective into structures similar to simple metazoans, without being specific about the (molecular, cellular or physical) nature of the processes involved. To do so, we have used a computational modeling approach following a modified version of the "Swarmalator" concept introduced by O'Keeffe, Hong and Strogatz (2017): a collection of interacting particles ("swarmalators"), each of which defined by a position in space and an internal state (a phase). The key feature is that swarmalators are coupled, so that their position and internal state are both affected by the position and state of all other swarmalators. This model can be easily analogized to biological systems, with "cells" being the swarmalators, and their phase the cell's internal state or "cell type". With this model we explore the conditions (represented by the coupling parameters) that would allow the organization of a multicellular "bioswarmer" and its dynamics along a sort of life cycle. Originally developed in 2D, we implement the model in 3D as well. We describe how changing the strength of intercellular communication can alter the structure and differentiation state of the bioswarmer, how internal polarization can arise and trigger collective directed migration, or how partly erasing the cellular memory of cell state is critical to allow bioswarmers to transit through different states. In addition, we show that the size of a multicellular ensemble might control the differentiation of its constituent cells without changing its rules of relationship.


Subject(s)
Cell Communication , Models, Biological , Animals , Cell Movement , Computer Simulation
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