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Physical confinement and phagocytic uptake induce persistent cell migration

Summer G. Paulson, Sophia Liu, Jeremy D. Rotty*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Physical confinement is not routinely considered as a factor that influences phagocytosis, which is typically investigated using unconfined in vitro assays. BV2 microglia-like cells were used to interrogate the impact of confinement on IgG-mediated phagocytosis side by side with unconfined cells. Confinement acted as a potent phagocytic driver, greatly increasing the fraction of phagocytic cells in the population compared to the unconfined setting. Arp2/3 complex and myosin II contributed to this effect. Remarkably, confinement partially rescued phagocytic uptake upon myosin II disruption. In addition, cells under confinement were partially resistant to the actindepolymerizing drug cytochalasin D. Unexpectedly, we observed that bead uptake stimulated persistent migration, a process we term ‘phagocytic priming’. Integrin-dependent adhesion was required for phagocytic priming in unconfined and confined settings but was dispensable for phagocytic uptake. The cytoskeletal requirements for phagocytic priming differed depending on confinement state. Myosin II and Arp2/3 complex were required for phagocytic priming under confinement, but not in unconfined settings. As with phagocytosis, cytoskeleton-dependent priming of motility varies based on physical confinement status. Phagocytic priming may be a crucial innate immune mechanism by which cells respond to wounds or trauma with increased surveillance of the local microenvironment.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberbio062021
JournalBiology Open
Volume14
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025

Keywords

  • Actin
  • Arp2/3 complex
  • Confined motility
  • Fibronectin
  • Microglia
  • Myosin
  • Phagocytosis

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