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AMER. ZOOL., 21:401-411 (1981) Locomotion of Fundulus Deep Cells during Gastrulation1 J. P. TRINKAUS Department of Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520 and Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543 AND ™ C. A. ERICKSON Department of Zoology, University of California, Davis, Davis, California 95616 and Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543 SYNOPSIS. Mechanism of locomotion of deep cells of Fundulus heteroclitus was studied in vivo during gastrulation with the aid of time lapse cinemicrography (Nomarski differential interference contrast optics), scanning electron microscopy of cells known to be moving at the time of fixation, and cell culture. These are our findings. 1) Deep cells usually move rapidly, at about 10—15 /i.m/min, regardless of whether they move by blebbing or spreading. Evidence suggests that this high speed is associated with weak adhesion of the trailing edge: it remains rounded, without large retraction fibers, and it advances continuously with advance of the leading edge, not sporadically, as it would if it adhered strongly. 2) In contrast, when stationary cells in close contact separate, they remain connected by retraction fibers, suggesting strong punctate adhesions. 3) Locomotion by shortening of a long lobopodium is really a form of spreading movement; the tip of a lobopodium always spreads. Also, since speed of shortening decreases with continuance, it may depend primarily on elastic recoil rather than active contraction. 4) Fundulus deep cells appear to move in two ways: a) protrusion of blebs, followed by much cytoplasmicflow;b) protrusion of lamellipodia, accompanied by filopodia and frequent cell shortening. 5) Filopodia were not found except at the leading edge of a spreading lamellipodium and often spread themselves; perhaps filopodia and lamellipodia are interconvertible. 6) A lamellipodial margin may form undulations in vivo that move backward like ruffles in vitro. 7) At all times, whether stationary or moving, the surface of deep cells is smooth, raising unanswered questions concerning the source of surface for their rapid protrusive activity. movements of deep cells during gastrulaAlthough the surface activity and loco- nonO u r unanswered questions concern motion of deep cells of the Fundulus biasmaml y t h e morphology of the adhesion of toderm have been studied in situ in considerable detail during blastula and gastrula d e e P c e l l s t o t h e i r normal substrata and to stages (Trinkaus, 1973), a number of ques- e a c h o t h e r d u n n g movement and details tions were left unanswered, due primarily o f t h e morphology of locomotor extento the limited use in these studies of No- s l o n s o f t h e leading edge. For example, do marski differential interference contrast deep cells adhere over a broad area of conoptics (DIC) and to the absence of obser- t a c t o r mainly at highly local points at or vations with the scanning electron micro- n e a r t h e i r margins, like fibroblasts (Harris, scope. We have since applied both of these 1 9 7 3 : I z z a r d a n d Lochner, 1980)? Is the techniques to further study of the loco- surface of a deep cell pulled out to form motion of these fascinating cells, both in retraction fibers when it moves away from vivo and in cell culture, and in conse- contacts with other cells? And can the quence have been able to expand our adhesions of these cells be related to their knowledge and understanding of the pattern and speed of movement? In the previous study (Trinkaus, 1973), deep cells were observed to form blebs, elonp lik i fd • From the Symposium on Developmental Biology of &* finger-like extensions referred to as Fishes presented at the Annual Meeting of the Amerlobopodia, broad lamellipodia, and hloican Society of Zoologists, 27-30 December 1979, at podia of varying degrees of thickness. But Tampa, Florida. because of the limitations of the in vito sitINTRODUCTION 401 402 J. P. TRINKHAUS AND C. A. ERICKSON uation (light must pass through an egg 1.8 mm in diameter) and our previous almost exclusive dependence on bright-field optics, crucial details of the morphology of these protrusions were lacking. Are blebs really smooth surfaced? Indeed, are deep cells in general smooth surfaced, like spread fibroblasts, or covered with microprotrusions, such as microvilli, like rounded fibroblasts (Erickson and Trinkaus, 1976) and like the yolk syncytial layer of the Fundulus egg (Betchaku and Trinkaus, 1978)? Or, are they covered with microfolds, like cells of the Fundulus enveloping layer before they are spread (Betchaku and Trinkaus, 1978)? What is the structural relationship between lamellipodia and filopodia? They seem to grade off into one another in films. SEM is clearly necessary to obtain such details. Also, do the lamellae of moving deep cells show undulating activity or ruffling as they spread on the relatively flat substratum of the yolk syncytial layer (YSL) at the floor of the segmentation cavity in vivo, as do fibroblasts when they spread on plane glass or plastic substrata in vitro? Finally, it was previously noted that Fundulus deep cells often move quite rapidly within the blastoderm and that this speed correlates with the presence of a rounded cell body (Trinkaus, 1973). This implies that the trailing cell body adheres less firmly to the substratum than the trailing edge of a moving fibroblast in vitro. If so, the movement of the trailing edge of a deep cell should be continuous, responding more or less immediately to the pull of the advancing leading edge, and not spasmodic like that of a fibroblast (Chen, 1981). Also, there should be no morphological evidence of firm adhesion to the substratum. The primary purpose of this paper is to report the results of our efforts to answer these questions by time-lapse cinemicrography, using DIC optics, by cell culture, and by scanning electron microscopy. All details of methods, determinations of rate of movement and illustrations of deep cells, both in the living state, as viewed in films, and in the fixed state, as viewed in SEM, are presented in a full publication of the results of this study which will appear shortly (Trinkaus and Erickson, in preparation). The present paper is intended to be no more than an extended summary of some of the contents of that paper. £ MATERIALS AND METHODS The materials for these studies were deep blastomeres of early to late gastrula stages of Fundulus heteroclitus (stages 13 to 18) (Armstrong and Child, 1965). Eggs were prepared for in vivo studies of living blastomeres in situ, as described in Trinkaus (1973), and filmed, using DIC. The Fundulus egg lends itself particularly well to study of moving cells with SEM. For when a blastoderm is removed from the underlying yolk syncytial layer (YSL) during mid to late gastrula stages, a certain number of deep cells remain stuck to the YSL just under the embryonic shield. If such an egg, bereft of its blastoderm, is placed in a nutrient tissue culture medium, these cells soon begin to move and filming has shown that their mode of movement under these circumstances does not differ from that in an intact, unoperated egg. Since their motile activity can be observed prior to fixation and they can be identified after fixation, one is able to determine with certainty that a particular cell observed in the SEM was moving at the time of fixation and in which direction, in contrast to most SEM studies of cells presumed to be moving inside opaque embryos where the motile state of each cell cannot be determined prior to fixation. In our SEM study, Leibovitz L-15 (GIBCO) was the tissue culture medium and fixation was in gluteraldehyde (3%), followed by post-osmication. For observations of cell movement in culture, deep cells were scooped out of early gastrula blastoderms (stage 1314-14) and cultured in Leibovitz L-15 medium at room temperature, 21O-23°C. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Our new information relates particularly to protrusive activity, mode of movement, pattern of adhesion, and surface contour of cells utilizing both blebs and la- LOCOMOTION OF FUNDULUS DEEP CELLS mellipodia and filopodia for their movement. Blebbing movement A As previously observed (Trinkaus, 1973, i fable 1), cells using blebs as organs of locomotion tend to move quite fast, at about 10 fim/min. It was also observed that these cells almost always retain a rounded cell body during this rapid movement. A predominantly rounded cell body suggests weak adhesions to the substratum, since there is little or no obvious morphological indication of adhesion, such as scalloping of the trailing edge or the formation of retraction fibers, where the cell surface is pulled out to a point because of strong adhesion to its substratum. In the present study, we were able to film five deep cells involved in blebbing movement in vivo with DIC optics for long enough periods to gain additional information on this matter. The trailing edge of each of these cells appeared to remain rounded throughout each period of observation. Although very fine retraction fibers might well not be resolved in these films, in spite of the use of DIC optics, large ones, and other gross distortions of the cell margin, such as scalloping, would be readily detected (see Fig. 6 of Trinkaus, 1973). None of this was seen. Significantly, in one of the two instances where the trailing edge did not advance during one 20-sec period of observation, it lost its smooth rounded contour and appeared slightly distorted, as if its adhesion strengthened momentarily. When it resumed its smooth contour, it advanced immediately after this slight hesitation. If the adhesion of the trailing edge is actually weak, as suggested by this morphological evidence, we would expect its advance to be quite continuous, responding more or less immediately to the pull of the continually advancing leading edge, and not erratic or spasmodic, as in fibroblasts where the trailing edge adheres strongly and is relatively immobile for relatively long periods (Chen, 1981). We therefore plotted the distance advanced by the trailing edge of each of these cells during succeeding 20-sec intervals during the 403 entire period of observation and from this calculated the rate in //,m/min for each 20sec interval. From these determinations it is clear that, except for a few major fluctuations in speed, the advance of the trailing edge of these cells was remarkably constant during the period of observation. The distance advanced during each 20-sec interval rarely more than doubled from one 20-sec interval to the next, or even from 1 min to the next and usually varied much less than that. Further, the trailing edge of each of these cells always advanced during each 20-sec interval, with only three exceptions. This is in marked contrast to fibroblast movement. Incidentally, the speed of these cells during the period of observation was quite fast, 9.1 ± 2.4 /u.m/ min to 12.3 ± 4.3 /xm/min, confirming previous observations. It should also be emphasized that the rate of advance of the trailing edge of all 5 cells was approximately the same as the overall rate of advance of the leading edge throughout the period of observation, again in marked contrast to fibroblasts moving in vitro. We say "approximately" because the leading edge usually advances unevenly over a broad front and selection of which part of the margin is leading at any given moment is bound to be arbitrary to a degree. For example, hemispheric blebs themselves form very rapidly at one locus or another at the leading edge, in 2-10 sec, depending somewhat upon their size, but the movement of cytoplasm into them and the extension of the rest of the leading edge in between blebs takes place much more slowly—indeed, at about the same rate as retraction of the trailing edge. Incidentally, in all of these moving cells, blebs were observed to form exclusively somewhere on the front or sides of the broad leading edge, never on the sides of the rear of the cell or at the trailing edge proper. This would tend to reinforce a continuation of movement in a particular direction (Chen, 1979; Trinkaus, 1980; Kolega, 1981), as indeed actually occurs in these cells, at least for short periods. This relatively steady advance of the trailing edge strongly supports the conclusion reached from the morphological evi- 404 J. P. TRINKHAUS AND C. A. ERICKSON dence—that the trailing edge of these cells is only weakly adherent. It offers little or no resistance to the tug of the leading edge and follows along immediately. There are small variations in rate that may be due to variations in the adhesiveness of the trailing edge or in the tension exerted by the extending leading edge or in the force of contraction of the leading part of the cell. But we have no evidence on this matter. We have no certain information from SEM concerning the adhesions made by cells known to be involved in blebbing movement at the time of fixation. For some curious reason, we did not succeed in preserving any cells moving like this on the exposed YSL. However, we do have some micrographs of deep cells that were apparently moving among other deep cells at the time of fixation and have a bulbous extension at one end of the cell that has the size and form of a protrusion at the leading edge of a cell involved in blebbing locomotion. These micrographs confirm the smooth, rounded appearance of the trailing edge, as viewed in the living state in films. Moreover, no retraction fibers too fine to be resolved by the light microscope were evident. Good information on the distribution of adhesions of a rounded cell to the surfaces of other cells comes from other deep cells that appeared not to be moving, but whose locomotor activity was not actually known with certainty at the time of fixation, and from certain rounded cells adhering to other cells on the exposed YSL, which were known with certainty not to be moving at the time of fixation. These cells are visibly attached to each other by focal adhesions, but it is of course not clear whether these are their sole sites of attachment. From such surface images, we do not know, for example, whether each cell is in contact with its substratum submarginally as well. One can only say that no such contacts were observed in thin sections of deep cells on the YSL (Trinkaus and Lentz, 1967, Fig. 14); in transmission electron migrographs the cells seem merely to be resting on the tips of the microvilli of the YSL. But, then, if there were such contacts and they were truly focal, they would be easily missed in thin sections. Spreading movement In the first study of Fundulus deep cell movement (Trinkaus, 1973), three niode-j^ of movement were discerned. These were called blebbing movement (which we have just discussed), lobopodial movement, and lamellipodial movement. The term lobopodial movement described a mode whose dominant feature is the quick shortening of a thick elongate finger-like leading extension which pulled the cell body forward (Triankaus, 1973, Fig. 17). The term lamellipodial movement described a mode whose dominant feature is the spreading of the leading edge on the substratum to form a broad, relatively flattened lamella, or lamellipodium. With the optical limits of the previous study, one could not be certain of the morphology of the tip of the lobopodia (or phallopodia, as we have come to call them because of their form). In some instances, it seemed rounded (e.g., Trinkaus, 1973, Fig. 16A), in others slightly spread (e.g., Trinkaus, 1973, Fig. 20). Moreover, it was observed that as the lobopodium shortened, pulling the cell body and trailing edge forward rapidly, oftentimes its tip moved forward at the same time, indicating that the terminal adhesion of the leading edge was not immobile but was moving itself. Clearly, we had to have a closer look at the morphology and activity of such an advancing tip. For if its advance is accompanied by spreading, it would be more properly termed a lamella or lamellipodium. If so, this mode of movement would more properly be considered to be simply an elongate variant of lamellipodial movement. Another question left unresolved in the previous study was the locomotor activity of filopodia. Although rather thick filopodia were sometimes observed (e.g., Trinkaus, 1973, Fig. 21), their role, if any, in cell movement was not determined. In particular, their relation to spreading lamellipodia was left unclear; for these two protrusive activities frequently seemed to occur together. Moreover, again because LOCOMOTION OF FUNDULUS DEEP CELLS of the poor resolution of bright field microscopy and the optical problems posed by the rather large diameter of the Fundulus egg, we could not be certain whether very fine filopodia, with the dimensions of Jtttiose of other embryonic cells such as sea urchin mesenchyme, were present or not. For all this, we needed DIC optics and SEM. We also needed more detail on the adhesion of the trailing edge of these cells, as discussed above for cells engaged in blebbing movement. Although it was clearly established in the previous study that some deep cells move by means of broad spreading lamellae, no details were observed. Does the exposed surface of an advancing lamella show ruffling? What is the pattern of adhesion of the lamella and of the rest of the cell to the substratum and to other cells. Do they form retraction fibers upon retraction? A particularly important morphological question that has needed attention is the relation between lamellipodia and filopodia. In the previous study, a lamellipodium sometimes seemed to divide longitudinally into filopodia and at other times the leading edge of a lamellipodium seemed to terminate in filar extensions just at the limit of resolution. Culturing deep cells, to take advantage of the superior optical conditions of cell culture, and SEM, as well as DIC in vivo, were used to obtain a more accurate picture of what is going on. The superior resolution provided by DIC optics has enabled us to settle decisively the question concerning the activity of the leading edge of cells moving by means of the rapid shortening of a long phallopodium. In all cases in which the tip was in focus, it was found to be spread on the substratum. Moreover, in most cases in which the extended leading part of the cell shortened rapidly, thereby quickly pulling the rounded cell body forward, it itself advanced exactly in a manner previously referred to as lamellipodial movement. Further, in many cells clearly engaged in "lamellipodial movement" a good deal of the advance of the trailing edge is also due to a shortening of the portion of the cell back of the leading lamellar region. It 405 seems reasonable to conclude, therefore, that the separate designation "lobopodial movement" is misleading. It is simply an extreme variant of what normally occurs much of the time during so-called "lamellipodial movement." Although it is usually assumed that rapid shortening of a cell or a part of a cell is due to active contraction, it could as well be due to the passive recoil of an elastic system under tension, or to a combination of both (Francis and Allen, 1971; Trinkaus, 1973; Izzard, 1974; Chen, 1981). Izzard (1974) showed conclusively that the shortening of the long filopodia of moving tunic cells of Botryllus is indeed due to active contraction. On the other hand, however, Chen (1981) has found that the shortening of the taut, extended tail of a moving fibroblast upon scission of its attachment to the glass substratum is due to a mixture of the two processes: passive elastic recoil in its first rapid phase, and active contraction in its second slow phase. It was, therefore, of interest to observe that in our most clear-cut case of shortening, unaccompanied by simultaneous advance of the leading lamella, retraction of the trailing edge occurs very rapidly at first, and then gradually slows down to zero. This is exactly what one would expect of the retraction of an elastic system under tension. For, as tension is dissipated, there would be less and less force for retraction and it would correspondingly slow down and finally cease when the declining tension equals the force resisting shortening. It seems therefore, that a large part of the rapid retraction of elongate deep cells may depend primarily on elastic recoil rather than active contraction. (It is, of course, conceivable that increasing adhesion of the trailing edge is responsible for the decrease in rate, but we have no eidence on this.) We wish now to direct attention to the leading lamella, or lamellipodium. All observations in vivo are based on study of deep cells moving on the YSL. This substratum was selected for three reasons. 1) Since the YSL is relatively planar (compared to the surfaces of other deep cells or the undersurface of the enveloping layer, 406 J. P. TRINKHAUS AND C. A. ERICKSON even though it is covered with microvilli [Betchaku and Trinkaus, 1978]), it was much easier to keep the cell in focus for a long enough period to secure a meaningful sequence. 2) One can fix cells moving on the YSL directly for viewing with SEM, as previously explained (see above, p. 402). 3) The nuclei of the YSL provide convenient markers in the substratum and are particularly valuable in estimating the amount of drift of the egg when it happened to move during the observations, so that appropriate corrections could be made in estimating speed. The ventral region of the blastoderm, submarginal to the germ ring, was selected for filming the movements of living cells in situ because there are fewer cells there and it was therefore easier to observe the movement of cells as individuals. The dorsal region under the embryonic shield was selected for observing cells with SEM for reasons already given (see p. 402). At least in so far as lamellipodial movement is concerned, we have no reason to believe that cells move differently on the YSL in the two regions. Cells were filmed moving both on the ventral YSL in the intact egg and on the exposed dorsal YSL in Leibovitz L-15 nutrient medium after removal of the blastoderm and no differences were detected. As noted in the previous study (Trinkaus, 1973), the breadth of the leading lamella varies considerably from cell to cell and during the movement of any one cell, from very broad to very narrow. In addition, there seems to be a partial one-way antagonism between blebbing and spreading. Although the leading edge is often observed to spread somewhat during blebbing movement, broad lamellipodia are rarely observed to bleb. Undulations or ruffles were rarely seen on the upper surface of lamellipodia, but, when observed, these ruffles form at or near the leading margin of a lamellipodium and then propagate backward a short distance on the upper surface, as on fibroblasts in culture. We believe this to be the first time ruffles have been observed on cells moving in vivo during normal development. But this is an observation of doubtful significance, since ruffles are not known in any instance to be necessary for movement (Trinkaus, 1976). It is of interest that ruffling has only been observed on the lamellipodia of deep cells moving on the YSL, where their upper surface is exposed to the fluid of the segmentation cavity. This reminds one of ruffling cells in culture, where it always occurs on the upper cell surface which is bathed in the fluid medium. It must be said, however, that if deep cells otherwise situated were not observed to ruffle, we would not know whether that indicated concealment of ruffling by other cells lying on top or genuine absence of ruffling. The increased resolution provided by DIC optics has clearly shown that spreading by deep cells in vivo to form lamellipodia is a more widespread phenomenon than previously suspected. Among the important features of these lamellipodia that remain unresolved are the not uncommon apparent transformation of broad lamellae into an array of filopodia and the detailed activity of the extending leading edge of a lamellipodium. Recourse to cell culture and SEM have contributed useful information on these matters. We have no guarantee, of course, that the behavior of deep cells under the artificial conditions of cell culture is the same as in the developing blastoderm, nor that their appearance after fixation represents accurately their morphology at the instant of fixation. And, indeed, one of the main reasons for studying these cells and other cells in the living state in their natural surroundings has been our concern that the plane solid glass or plastic substratum and the artificial media of cell culture would impose a special kind of morphology and locomotor behavior on the cell and that fixation would modify detailed surface contour in some way. Be that as it may, if a cell's gross morphology and mode of movement in culture and in SEM does resemble what we see in the embryo, we have good reason to expect that the better optical conditions of culture and the higher magnification of SEM could contribute reliable detail. Fortunately, we were able to persuade deep cells to move in culture in a few instances and, moreover, to move in a manner superfidaily identical to what has been observed in vivo: a broad, flat lamellipodium spread- LOCOMOTION OF FUNDULUS DEEP CELLS ing over the substratum, followed continually and without hesitation by a rounded cell body with a rounded trailing edge. In addition, the speed of movement of deep cells in vitro, 6-8 /xm/min, was comparable 0 o the speed of such cells in vivo (and much faster, for example, than fibroblasts in vitro). It was, therefore, of much interest to discover a marked tendency of the broad lamellipodium of such a cell to form long ridges or folds aligned in the direction of cell movement. Since even in culture these folds appeared at first glance to be "filopodia," they might provide an explanation for the apparent "transformation" of lamellipodia into "filopodia" that we occasionally see under less favorable optical conditions in vivo. This evidence against the division of lamellipodia into filopodia is corroborated by the fact that we have never observed filopodia serving as exclusive organs of locomotion in either our films or in SEM of fixed deep cells. In no instance in SEM have cells known to be moving at the time of fixation been observed to be equipped solely with the kind of thick "filopodia" that we think we see in vivo in the living blastoderm. On the contrary, lamellipodia in SEM sometimes appear folded in the same way as in culture. It therefore seems reasonable to conclude tentatively that Fundulus deep cells do not move exclusively by means of filopodia in the fashion of primary mesenchyme cells of sea urchins (Gustafson and Wolpert, 1961) or tunic cells of tunicates (Izzard, 1974). This is not to say, however, that filopodia are unimportant in the movement of deep cells. On the contrary, one of the striking revelations of SEM is the invariable presence of what appear to be fine filopodia protruding from the advancing leading edge of each lamellipodium. These filopodia are too fine to be resolved by light microscopy in vivo in the blastoderm and demonstrate strikingly the utility of SEM. They are often <0.5 /xm thick at the base and <0.2 (xm thick at the tip and along most of their length; also, they are often branched. They adhere to the YSL at their tips and seemingly at certain points subterminally as well. Since they invariably extend beyond the broad expanse 407 of the lamellipodium, they appear to constitute the true leading edge of these cells. Just how they relate functionally to the lamellar region is unknown. On such a matter, observation of fixed cells with SEM in and of itself can only provide hints. It is possible that the leading edge of the lamellipodium spreads forward between its protruding filopodia, filling in the spaces and using the filopodia, with their adhesions to the substratum, as anchors stabilizing the advance of the leading edge. This has been observed in culture for epithelial cells (Buckley and Porter, 1967; DiPasquale, 1975) and platelets (Allen et al., 1979). For Fundulus deep cells, however, this is pure speculation. It is also possible that they represent retraction fibers remaining after previously extended lamellipodia had pulled back just before or at the time of fixation. We think this to be unlikely for two reasons. 1) Recently, with the superior optical conditions of cell culture, Shure and one of us (Shure and Trinkaus, in preparation) have observed living deep cells forming exceedingly fine filopodia. Hence, they are obviously capable of forming such protrusions. 2) The majority of these filar extensions observed with SEM on the YSL are not taut and straight, like retraction fibers under tension, and many are branched. Possibly, the two forms of protrusive activity are interconvertible. Lamellipodia of Fundulus deep cells are often so narrow that it is questionable whether it is semantically more accurate to refer to them as narrow lamellipodia or as broad filopodia. And, conversely, filopodia appear to be able to spread on the substratum to such a degree that they really have become lamellar. Lamellipodia can become distinctly filar and filopodia distinctly lamellar. Unfortunately, we have not yet been able to check the validity of this idea in living deep cells in vivo because of optical limitations. The discovery of the composite morphology of the leading portion of these cells poses a problem in terminology. How are we to designate the mode of deep cell movement that we have previously termed "lamellipodial"? We propose that it now be called "spreading movement," 408 J. P. TRINKHAUS AND C. A. ERICKSON for spreading activity is an invariable, if not dominant, feature of this mode of deep cell movement, even though filopodia seem to be almost always present. This also distinguishes it from blebbing movement, in which spreading is certainly not a dominant feature, though often evident. These observations lead to an important conclusion. Fundulus deep cells appear to translocate during and after gastrulation in but two ways: predominantly by spreading, with the participation of filopodia, and predominantly by blebbing, with rapid and massive cytoplasmic flow and often a small amount of spreading. And, even the differences between these two seem in part quantitative. Other extensions of the cell surface that are routinely observed in tissue culture of many kinds of cells but which were not observed on deep cells in vivo in the previous study (Trinkaus, 1973) are retraction fibers. Since they mark the points on the surface of a retracted fibroblast where the cell is known by interference reflection microscopy to have been in closest contact with the substratum (Izzard and Lochner, 1976; 1980) and by microdissection to adhere most strongly (Chen, 1981), it seems reasonable to assume that the location of retraction fibers can be taken as a sure sign of localized strong adhesion, where other means, such as interference reflexion microscopy (Curtis, 1964), cannot be applied. Both DIC optics and SEM have revealed that Fundulus deep cells frequently form retraction fibers when they pull away from other deep cells and from the surface of the YSL. If these retraction fibers do indeed mark the sites of the strongest adhesions between these cells, we can conclude that Fundulus deep cells in vivo, like fibroblasts in vitro, do not adhere strongly over a broad area but only at certain delimited foci. Significantly, in each case where a retraction fiber is visible in films, the cell surface to which it is attached is pulled out in a pointed conical form. And, where one is observed to detach or rupture and disappear, the cell surface in that region rapidly retracts and rounds off. In one case the trailing edge of a cell retracted at the incredible rate of 48.0 /xm/min during a 12sec period immediately after disappearance of a large retraction fiber. Another cell retracted at 7.0 /xm/min during 10 sec after disappearance of its retraction fiber^ In each instance, the trailing edge appeared rounded within seconds after disappearance of the retraction fibers. Since observation of an obvious retraction fiber is associated with a pointed contour of the trailing edge and disappearance of a retraction fiber with a rounding of the trailing edge, it seems reasonable to conclude that observation of a rounded trailing edge indicates either lack of retraction fibers, i.e., of firm adhesions, or the presence of very slender ones that are easily broken. SEM and cell culture confirm this conclusion. Moving cells with rounded cell bodies fixed and viewed in SEM possess only very thin retraction fibers, <0.1 fim thick, which would be undetectable in films of living cells in vivo, whereas those with a tapering pointed trailing edge have thick retraction fibers, which would be readily visible in films of living cells in vivo. Moving cells with rounded cell bodies viewed in cell culture, where thin retraction fibers would be readily detected with DIC, were not observed to possess retraction fibers at the trailing edge. Since cells with rounded trailing edges either lack retraction fibers or possess only a few extremely delicate ones, one would expect that the adhesions of the cell body of such cells would offer little resistence to the forward tug of the lamellipodia and filopodia of the leading edge and should respond immediately to it. This should yield two results. 1) The movement of the cell body should follow right along with the movement of the leading edge and the movement of the trailing edge should be continuous, not sporadic and spasmodic as in fibroblasts in vitro (Chen, 1981), if movement of the leading edge is steady. 2) If lamellipodia and filopodia protrude rapidly, movement of the whole cell should be correspondingly rapid, as in blebbing movement. Indeed, by analogy, movement of fibroblasts in vitro is much LOCOMOTION OF FUNDULUS DEEP CELLS more rapid when not restrained by strong adhesion of the trailing edge, such as just after retraction of the trailing edge, when for a short time it has a rounded contour (Chen, 1979; Dunn, 1980). To test these ijwppotheses, the rate of movement of the rounded trailing edge of seven deep cells involved in spreading movement in vivo on the YSL was measured during succeeding 20-sec intervals and the rate/min for each 20-sec interval calculated. The results correspond closely to the predictions. 1) Although the rate of movement of the rounded trailing edge varied somewhat in some cells from interval to interval, in every case its movement was continuous. The trailing edge followed along quickly after the leading edge, responding immediately. 2) Because of this immediate response to the tug of the rapidly moving leading edge, the rate of movement of the cell was invariably fast, 9.6 ± 1.6 to 16.3 ± 2.5 /nm/min, much faster than that of fibroblasts in vitro, and generally of the same order of magnitude of deep cells with a rounded trailing edge moving by blebbing movement. In some instances, indeed, the rate was as high as 20 /Am/min for short periods of time, comparable to that of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in culture (Zigmond, 1978). We have no explanation for such an augmentation of rate. 409 and (of course) retraction fibers—is invariably smooth. This smoothness of surface is in marked contrast, incidentally, to the surface of the enveloping layer and of the YSL of the same egg during the blastula stage and early epiboly, when they are covered with folds (EVL) and microvilli (YSL) (Trinkaus and Lentz, 1967; Betchaku and Trinkaus, 1978). Clearly, Fundulus cells other than deep cells can form these structures. In one sense, this is a rather mysterious situation, for there is substantial evidence that fibroblasts in vitro (Follett and Goldman, 1970; Erickson and Trinkaus, 1976) and the YSL of Fundulus (Betchaku and Trinkaus, 1978) depend on a ready supply of extra cell surface held in reserve in many minor protuberances for the large increases in cell surface that occur as they begin to spread (for a recent discussion, see Trinkaus, 1980). In the absence of further information, of course, we can do little more than speculate about how Fundulus cells obtain the large local increases in surface required for the very rapid protrusive activity that accompanies and is, in fact, the key element in their extraordinarily rapid locomotion. There must either be massive manufacture of new surface, massive exocytosis, or massive movement of surface from one part of the cell to another. We know nothing about the possibility of new surface being synthesized and there is no evidence from TEM for massive exocytosis (Trinkaus and Surface contour Lentz, 1967; Hogan and Trinkaus, 1977) A curious and at present inexplicable (although it must be admitted that addifeature of Fundulus deep cells during gas- tion of surface by exocytosis might easily trulation—both those involved in blebbing be missed in ultra-thin sections). There is movement and in spreading movement— definite evidence, however, that favors is their constantly smooth surface. Never, massive movement of cell surface. Marks in any of the numerous scanning electron on the surface of Fundulus deep cells in micrographs we have taken of deep cells, vitro move toward a forming bleb, whether within the blastoderm or on the exposed it is artificially induced by application of YSL, have we ever observed microprotu- negative pressure and/or occurs naturally berances, such as microvilli, microfolds, or (Tickle and Trinkaus, 1977). And, more microblebs, on their surface. Nor have impressively, the translocation of fibrothey ever been seen in TEM (Trinkaus and blasts in vitro also seems to involve the Lentz, 1967; Hogan and Trinkaus, 1977). shifting of surface material, once they are This statement applies both to stationary completely spread and their surface comcells and cells in active movement. The pletely smooth. Protrusive activity at one surface of all parts of the cell—rounded locus on the cell surface is accompanied or cell body, blebs, lamellipodia, filopodia 410 J. P. TRINKHAUS AND C. A. ERICKSON of cells to glass. A study by interference reflection microscopy. J. Cell Biol. 20:199-215. DiPasquale, A. 1975. Locomotory activity of epithelial cells in culture. Exp. Cell Res. 94:191-215. Dunn, G. A. 1980. Mechanisms of fibroblast locomotion. In A. S. G. Curtis and J. D. Pitts (eds.), Cell adhesion and motility, pp. 409-423. C a m ^ bridge University Press, Cambridge. Erickson, C. A. and J. P. Trinkaus. 1976. Microvilli and blebs as sources of reserve surface membrane during cell spreading. Exp. Cell Res. 99:375-384. Follett, E. A. C. and R. D. Goldman. 1970. The occurrence of microvilli during spreading and growth of BHK21/C13 fibroblasts. Exp. Cell Res. 59:121-136. Francis, D. W. and R. D. Allen. 1971. Induced birefringence as evidence of endoplasmic viscoelasticity in Chaos carohnensis. J. Mechanochem. Cell Motility 1:1-6. Gustafson, T. and L. Wolpert. 1961. Studies on the cellular basis of morphogenesis in the sea urchin ACKNOWLEDGMENTS embryo. Directed movements of primary mesenchyme cells in normal and vegetalized larvae. We are indebted to the following for Exp. Cell Res. 24:64-79. their aid: W. S. Ramsey and T. Betchaku Harris, A. 1973. Location of cellular adhesions to (cinemicrography), P. B. Bell, Jr. (cell culsolid substrata. Dev. Biol. 35:97-114. ture), and A. S. Pooley (scanning electron Hogan.J. C, Jr. and J. P. Trinkaus. 1977. Intercellular junctions, intramembranous particles, and microscopy). This work was supported by cytoskeletal elements of deep cells of the Fungrants from the NSF (BMS 70-00610) and dulus gastrula. J. Embryol. Exp. Morph. 40:125the NIH (USPHS-H3-07137 and CA141. 22451) to J.P.T. and by a fellowship from lzzard, C. S. 1974. Contractile filopodia and in vivo cell movements in the tunic of the ascidian, Boan NIH Training Grant HP 00032 to tryllus schlossen. J. Cell Sci. 15:513-535. C.A.E. lzzard, C. S. and L. R. Lochner. 1976. Cell-to-substrate contacts in living fibroblasts: An interferREFERENCES ence reflection study with an evaluation of the technique. J. Cell Sci. 21:129-159. Allen, R. D., L. R. Zacharski, S. T. Widirstky, R. Rosenstein, L. M. Zaitlin, and D. R. Burgess. 1979. lzzard, C. S. and L. R. Lochner. 1980. Formation of cell-to-substrate contacts during fibroblast motilTransformation and motility of human platelets. ity: An interference-reflexion study. J. Cell Sci. Details of the shape change and release reaction 42:81-116. observed by optical and electron microscopy. J. Cell Biol. 83:126-142. Kolega, J. 1981. The movement of cell clusters in vitro: Morphology and directionality. J. Cell Sic. Armstrong, P. B. and J. S. Child. 1965. Stages in the (In press). normal development of Fundulus heteroclitus. Biol. Bull. 128:143-168. Tickle, C. and J. P. Trinkaus. 1977. Some clues as Betchaku, T. and J. P. Trinkaus. 1978. Contact reto the formation of protrusions by Fundulus deep lations, surface activity, and cortical microfilcells. J. Cell Sci. 26:139-150. aments of marginal cells of the enveloping layer Trinkaus, J. P. 1973. Surface activity and locomotion and of the yolk syncytial and yolk cytoplasmic of Fundulus deep cells during blastula and gaslayers of Fundulus before and during epiboly. J. trula stages. Dev. Biol. 30:68-103. Exp. Zool. 206:381-426. Trinkaus, J. P. 1976. On the mechanism of metaBuckley, I. K. and K. R. Porter. 1967. Cytoplasmic zoan cell movements. In G. Poste and G. L. Nifibrils in living cultured cells. Protoplasma colson (eds.), The cell surface in animal development. 64:349-380. Cell Surface Reviews 1:225-329. Chen, W.-T. 1979. Induction of spreading during Trinkaus, J. P. 1980. Formation of protrusions of fibroblast movement. J. Cell Biol. 81:684-691. the cell surface during tissue cell movement. In R. O. Hynes and C. F. Fox (eds.), Tumor cell surChen, W.-T. 1981. Mechanism of retraction of the faces and malignancy. Progress in Clinical and Bitrailing edge during fibroblast movement. J. Cell ological Research 41:887-906. Biol. (In press) Curtis, A. S. G. 1964. The mechanism of adhesion Trinkaus, J. P. and T. L. Lentz. 1967. Surface spe- preceded by retraction of an approximately equal amount of surface at another locus (Weiss and Garber, 1952; Chen, 1979; Dunn, 1980). We have noted in the present study that the protrusive activity of a moving deep cell tends to be confined to the general region of the leading edge (see above p. 403), but as yet have no quantitative information on the matter. And, unfortunately, Fundulus deep cells are seldom flat enough in vivo to lend themselves to a straightforward planimetric study of their surface area, as are fibroblasts in vitro (Chen, 1979). Hence the kind of estimates of local changes in surface area that are necessary to provide evidence on this point do not seem feasible at present. L O C O M O T I O N O F FUNDULUS DEEP CELLS 411 cializations of Fundulus cells and their relation to structure of the medium. Contributions to a cell movements during gastrulation. J. Cell Biol. quantitative morphology. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 32:139-153. U.S.A. 38:264-280. Weiss, P. and B. Garber. 1952. Shape and movement Zigmond, S. H. 1978. Chemotaxis by polymorphoof mesenchyme cells as functions of the physical nuclear leukocytes. J. Cell Biol. 77:269-287.