How do white blood cells move so fast?

If you fall and scrape a knee, it's the job of white blood cells called neutrophils to rush to the site of infection and chase down invading bacteria.

In order to race after bacteria at speeds up to a thousand times that of most , must move in a special way.

Lillian Fritz-Laylin, PhD, a postdoctoral scholar in UC San Francisco's Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, and Megan Riel-Mehan, PhD, a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Bioengineering, want to know how that works.

"Our immune system relies on fast like neutrophils getting to where they need to be," said Fritz-Laylin. "But we know surprisingly little about how these fast cells move."

Fritz-Laylin is a cell biologist. Riel-Mehan is a visualization scientist who develops tools to process and display complex data.  

Fritz-Laylin used a fast, high-resolution lattice light sheet microscope to record 3-D images of neutrophils migrating through a fibrous matrix. But the recorded data were enormous and complex. "I couldn't open even a single frame of one movie on my laptop without a software crash," Fritz-Laylin said.

That's where Riel-Mehan came in. She processed and rendered the images, drawing on her animation background and developing new software tools to shade crevasses and allow a human viewer to visually understand the 3-D data.

Credit: University of California, San Francisco

The rendered videos revealed that neutrophils create two types of protruding "feet" to help them move: planar sheets and multi-petaled rosettes. Previously, scientists thought planar sheets could only form when cells were grown in flat dishes, but the new videos show that planar sheets form even in a 3-D matrix that resembles the cells' natural environment.

This was the first time that researchers were able to watch up close as neutrophils moved in three dimensions.

Now, Fritz-Laylin is investigating how these protrusions are built and how they mechanically propel neutrophils forward, allowing them to race through our bodies and chase down invading microbes.

Fritz-Laylin and Riel-Mehan worked with a team of biologists, microscopy specialists, and data scientists to produce this video: Dyche Mullins, PhD, and Graham Johnson, PhD, of UCSF; Bi-Chang Chen and Eric Betzig of Janelia Research Campus; and Tom Goddard of UCSF Chimera.

"This project exemplifies the wonderful interplay that can exist between experimental science and visualization science," Riel-Mehan said. "It makes the case that visualization should be part of the research process, not just something you do at the very end for an article cover."

Citation: How do white blood cells move so fast? (2016, November 22) retrieved 19 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2016-11-white-blood-cells-fast.html
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