TY - CHAP
T1 - Pseudopod Tracking and Statistics During Cell Movement in Buffer and Chemotaxis
AU - van Haastert, Peter J M
N1 - © 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Amoeboid cells such as the protist Dictyostelium, human neutrophils, and the fungus B.d. chytrid move by extending pseudopods. The trajectories of cell movement depend on the size, rhythm, and direction of long series of pseudopods. These pseudopod properties are regulated by internal factors such as memory of previous directions and by external factors such as gradients of chemoattractants or electric currents. Here a simple method is described that defines the X, Y time coordinates of a pseudopod at the start and the end of the extension phase. The connection between the start and end of an extending pseudopod defines a vector, which is the input of different levels of analysis that defines cell movement. The primary information of the vector is its spatial length (pseudopod size), temporal length (extension time), extension rate (size divided by time), and direction. The second layer of information describes the sequence of two (or more) pseudopods: the direction of the second pseudopod relative to the direction of the first pseudopod, the start of the second pseudopod relative to the extension phase of the first pseudopod (the second starts while the first is still extending or after the first has stopped), and the alternating right/left extension of pseudopods. The third layer of information is provided by specific and detailed statistical analysis of these data and addresses question such as: is pseudopod extension in buffer in random direction or has the system internal directional memory, and how do shallow external electrical or chemical gradients bias the intrinsic pseudopod extension. The method is described for Dictyostelium, but has been used successfully for fast-moving neutrophils, slow-moving stem cells, and the fungus B.d. chytrid.
AB - Amoeboid cells such as the protist Dictyostelium, human neutrophils, and the fungus B.d. chytrid move by extending pseudopods. The trajectories of cell movement depend on the size, rhythm, and direction of long series of pseudopods. These pseudopod properties are regulated by internal factors such as memory of previous directions and by external factors such as gradients of chemoattractants or electric currents. Here a simple method is described that defines the X, Y time coordinates of a pseudopod at the start and the end of the extension phase. The connection between the start and end of an extending pseudopod defines a vector, which is the input of different levels of analysis that defines cell movement. The primary information of the vector is its spatial length (pseudopod size), temporal length (extension time), extension rate (size divided by time), and direction. The second layer of information describes the sequence of two (or more) pseudopods: the direction of the second pseudopod relative to the direction of the first pseudopod, the start of the second pseudopod relative to the extension phase of the first pseudopod (the second starts while the first is still extending or after the first has stopped), and the alternating right/left extension of pseudopods. The third layer of information is provided by specific and detailed statistical analysis of these data and addresses question such as: is pseudopod extension in buffer in random direction or has the system internal directional memory, and how do shallow external electrical or chemical gradients bias the intrinsic pseudopod extension. The method is described for Dictyostelium, but has been used successfully for fast-moving neutrophils, slow-moving stem cells, and the fungus B.d. chytrid.
KW - Chemotaxis/physiology
KW - Dictyostelium/physiology
KW - Pseudopodia/physiology
KW - Cell Movement/physiology
KW - Humans
KW - Buffers
KW - Neutrophils/cytology
U2 - 10.1007/978-1-0716-4023-4_14
DO - 10.1007/978-1-0716-4023-4_14
M3 - Chapter
C2 - 39147978
SN - 978-1-0716-4022-7
SN - 978-1-0716-4025-8
VL - 2828
T3 - Methods in molecular biology
SP - 185
EP - 204
BT - Cell Motility and Chemotaxis
A2 - Beta, Carsten
A2 - Martinez-Torres, Christina
PB - Humana, New York, NY
ER -