Mathematical analysis of cell-target encounter rates in three dimensions. Effect of chemotaxis
- PMID: 2340340
- PMCID: PMC1280807
- DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(90)82620-5
Mathematical analysis of cell-target encounter rates in three dimensions. Effect of chemotaxis
Abstract
Efficient and rapid immune response upon challenge by an infectious agent is vital to host defense. The encounter of leukocytes (white blood cells of the immune system) with their targets is the first step in this response. Analysis of the kinetics of this process is essential not only to understanding dynamic behavior of the immune response, but also to elucidating the consequences of many leukocyte functional abnormalities. The motion of leukocytes in the presence of targets typically involves a directed, or chemotactic component. These immune cells orient the direction of their motion in the presence of gradients in chemical attractants generated by pathogens. Fisher and Lauffenburger (1987. Biophys. J. 51:705-716) developed a model for macrophage/bacterium encounter in two dimensions which includes chemotaxis, and applied it to the particular system of alveolar macrophages (phagocytic leukocytes on the lung surface). Their model showed that macrophage/target encounter is likely the rate-limiting step in clearance of bacteria from the lung surface (Fisher, E. S., D. A. Lauffenburger, and R. P. Daniele. 1988. Am. Rev. Resp. Dis. 137:1129-1134). We have extended this model to analyze the effects of cell motility properties and geometric parameters on cell-target encounter in three dimensions. The differential equation governing encounter time in three dimensions is essentially the same as that in two dimensions, except for changed probability values. Our results show that more highly directed motion is necessary in three dimensions to achieve substantially decreased encounter times than in two dimensions, because of the increased search dimensionality. These general results were applied to the particular system of neutrophils operating in three dimensions in response to a bacterial challenge in connective tissue. Our results provide a plausible rationalization for both the chemotactic and chemokinetic behavior observed in neutrophils. That is, these cells exhibit in vitro a greater chemotactic bias and a more dramatic variation of speed with attractant concentration than alveolar macrophages, and our results indicate that these behaviors can have a greater influence in three-dimensional connective tissue infection situations than in two-dimensional lung surface infection cases. In addition, we show that encounter apparently is not generally the rate-limiting step in this neutrophil response. These findings have important implications for correlating in vitro measured defects in cell motility and chemotaxis properties with in vivo functions of host defense against infection.
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