In a groundbreaking study from Kyoto University, scientists have uncovered a pivotal mechanism underlying the collective migration of cells, a process with profound implications for development, wound healing, and cancer metastasis. Much like coordinated flocks of birds or schools of fish, cells exhibit cooperative movement essential for various physiological functions. However, understanding how cells synchronize their migration despite their limited ability to perceive broader spatial information has posed a significant challenge to researchers. This study sheds light on the molecular dynamics that enable this collective behavior.
The essence of this discovery lies in the intricate interplay between ERK signaling waves and the cellular scaffolding protein ZO-1. ERK proteins, central to many signaling pathways, generate activation waves that propagate through migrating cell populations. ZO-1, traditionally recognized for its role in maintaining cell-cell junctions, reveals a surprising versatility. Instead of remaining fixed at the apical junctional complexes where cells adhere to each other, ZO-1 dynamically relocates during migration, moving to podosomes—specialized, actin-rich structures found on the basal surface of cells involved in adhesion to and degradation of the extracellular matrix.
By employing live-cell imaging techniques with Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, a well-established model for epithelial cell behavior, the research team was able to visualize both ERK activity and ZO-1 localization in real-time. ERK activity was monitored via a FRET biosensor, a sophisticated tool that captures the spatial and temporal dynamics of protein activation, while ZO-1 was tagged with fluorescent markers to reveal its precise positioning during migration.
Their observations revealed a fascinating choreography: ERK activation waves travel through the collective, and ZO-1 “rides” these waves from the junctional complexes to the podosomes on the basal surface. This relocation is not merely a spatial curiosity; it fundamentally transforms ZO-1’s function. Positioned at podosomes, ZO-1 enhances the forces cells use to navigate their environment and promotes the localized degradation of the extracellular matrix, facilitating invasive migration. Hence, ZO-1 acts as both a messenger and a mediator, linking signaling activity with mechanical and proteolytic processes required for cells to move as a coordinated unit.
Crucially, the study also demonstrated that ZO-1 influences ERK dynamics in return. This bidirectional relationship suggests a feedback loop where ZO-1 modulates ERK activation patterns, fine-tuning the collective migration process. Such a feedback system underscores the complexity of cellular coordination, integrating signaling, adhesion, force generation, and environmental remodeling into a seamless program.
This intricate mechanism provides a molecular framework to understand how cells operate not just individually but as a cohesive group, enabling them to respond collectively to biological cues. The ramifications extend beyond basic science; it opens avenues to decipher how pathological processes unfold, particularly the collective invasion of cancer cells, which mirrors developmental migration patterns but with devastating consequences.
Among the insights gathered, the dynamic relocation of ZO-1 redefines its traditional classification. First author Sayuki Hirano articulated the novelty of the finding: ZO-1’s behavior in traveling to basal podosomes represents a departure from its canonical role in static cell junctions and highlights its adaptability in response to cellular states. Such plasticity in protein function could be a widespread phenomenon, prompting a reevaluation of other adhesion molecules during cellular dynamics.
Looking forward, the team intends to extend their observations beyond cultured MDCK cells to living tissues, where the environmental complexities add layers to cellular behavior. The molecular intricacies of how ERK signaling governs ZO-1’s localization will also be dissected further to unravel the precise biochemical pathways orchestrating this process. This ongoing research promises to deepen our grasp of cellular collective migration and its perturbations in disease.
The discovery of ZO-1’s shuttling elucidates a fundamental biological question: how can cells coordinate movement over distances that surpass individual sensory or signaling capabilities? By leveraging molecular waves propagated through signaling networks, cells create a communal information flow that orchestrates their movements. The role of ZO-1 in coupling these signals to biomechanical outputs at the podosomes exemplifies evolution’s ingenious solutions to multi-cellular coordination.
ERK signaling pathways have long been implicated in various cellular responses, but their spatial propagation as waves adds a new dimension to understanding intercellular communication during migration. The visualization of these ERK waves using FRET biosensors in live cells was critical to connecting signaling dynamics to physical migration patterns. These technologies herald an era where dynamic cellular signaling in physiological contexts can be deciphered with unparalleled precision.
Furthermore, podosomes themselves emerge as crucial hubs for force-mediated cell migration and matrix remodeling. The revelation that ZO-1 accumulates at these sites positions the protein as a central integrator of signaling and mechanical function. Given the role of extracellular matrix degradation in enabling invasive behavior, these insights have potential therapeutic implications—modulating ZO-1 dynamics could become a strategy to limit cancer cell invasion and metastasis.
The collaborative nature of this research at Kyoto University, a prestigious institution with a rich history of scientific excellence, underscores the importance of interdisciplinary approaches combining cell biology, bioengineering, and molecular biophysics. These contributions advance the frontier of understanding how single-cell behaviors scale up to coordinated multicellular phenomena essential for life.
In conclusion, this study presents a compelling narrative where the scaffolding protein ZO-1 transforms from a static architectural component into a dynamic regulator that both follows and shapes biochemical signals to orchestrate collective cell movement. As the research community builds upon these findings, a new molecular paradigm emerges that could revolutionize perspectives on tissue development, repair mechanisms, and cancer progression.
Subject of Research: Cells
Article Title: ZO-1 shuttles between apical junctional complexes and podosomes by riding ERK activation waves
News Publication Date: 9-May-2026
Web References: DOI link
References: ZO-1 shuttles between apical junctional complexes and podosomes by riding ERK activation waves, Nature Communications, 9 May 2026, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-72840-8
Image Credits: KyotoU / Sayuki Hirano
Keywords: Collective cell migration, ERK signaling waves, ZO-1 protein, podosomes, extracellular matrix degradation, invasive migration, cell-cell adhesion, live-cell imaging, FRET biosensor, Madin-Darby canine kidney cells, molecular cell biology, cancer invasion.
Tags: cancer metastasis and collective migrationcell migration and wound healingcell-cell junction remodeling during migrationcollective cell migration mechanismsepithelial cell migration studiesERK signaling waves in cell movementextracellular matrix degradation by migrating cellslive-cell imaging of migrating cellsMDCK cells in migration researchmolecular dynamics of cell movementpodosomes in cell adhesion and migrationrole of ZO-1 protein in cell migration



