How spatial and temporal information are integrated to determine the direction of cell
migration remains poorly understood. Here, by precise microfluidics emulation of dynamic
chemoattractant waves, we demonstrate that, in Dictyostelium, directional
movement as well as activation of small guanosine triphosphatase Ras at the leading edge
is suppressed when the chemoattractant concentration is decreasing over time. This
‘rectification’ of directional sensing occurs only at an intermediate
range of wave speed and does not require phosphoinositide-3-kinase or F-actin. From
modelling analysis, we show that rectification arises naturally in a single-layered
incoherent feedforward circuit with zero-order ultrasensitivity. The required stimulus
time-window predicts ~5 s transient for directional sensing response close
to Ras activation and inhibitor diffusion typical for protein in the cytosol. We suggest
that the ability of Dictyostelium cells to move only in the wavefront is closely
associated with rectification of adaptive response combined with local activation and
global inhibition.
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