%0 Journal Article %T A Mutant of Dictyostelium discoideum, KI-Cell, as a Model of Collective Cell Migration Independent of Chemotaxis. %A Hayakawa M %A Kuwayama H %A Shibata T %J Methods Mol Biol %V 2828 %N 0 %D 2024 %M 39147968 暂无%R 10.1007/978-1-0716-4023-4_4 %X Collective cell migration occurs when the orientation of cell polarity is aligned with each other in a group of cells. Such collective polarization depends on a reciprocal process between cell intrinsic mechanisms such as cell-cell adhesion and extracellular guidance mechanism such as wound healing and chemotaxis. As part of its development life cycle, individual single cells of Dictyostelium discoideum exhibit chemotaxis toward cAMP, which is secreted from a certain population of cells. During the formation of multicellular body by chemotaxis-dependent cell aggregation, D. discoideum is also known to relay on multiple cell-cell adhesion mechanisms. In particular, tail-following behavior at the contact site, called contact following of locomotion (CFL), plays a pivotal role on the formation of the multicellular body. However, whether and how CFL alone can lead to a formation of collective behavior was not well understood. KI cell is a mutant of D. discoideum that lacks all chemotactic activity. Yet, it can exhibit the CFL activity and show nontrivial collective cell migration. This mutant provides an excellent model system to analyze the mechanism of the CFL and the macroscopic phenomena brought by the CFL. This chapter describes protocols for using KI cell to understand the biophysics and cell biology behind the collective cell migration induced by CFL.