Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Mechanisms of Collective Cell Movement
The Core Concept: Collective cell movement involves cells migrating in coordination with their neighbors during biological processes such as embryonic development and wound healing. Recent discoveries reveal this coordinated movement is facilitated by the scaffolding protein ZO-1 riding waves of ERK signaling activation.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike prior models that categorized ZO-1 purely as a static cell-to-cell adhesion element, new evidence demonstrates that it dynamically relocates to podosomes at the cell's basal surface. By following ERK activation waves, ZO-1 enhances cellular force generation and extracellular matrix degradation to promote invasive migration.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- ERK Signaling Waves: Biochemical signals that propagate through cellular populations to synchronize collective movement.
- ZO-1 Protein: A scaffolding protein that shifts its functional role from maintaining cell adhesion to facilitating cell invasion depending on its localization.
- Podosomes: Cellular structures located on the basal surface where ZO-1 accumulates to degrade the surrounding environment and generate migratory force.
- Live-Cell Imaging Tools: The use of FRET biosensors and fluorescent tagging to simultaneously track real-time ERK activity and ZO-1 protein localization.


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