Pseudopods can be classified into several varieties according to the number of projections (monopodia and polypodia), and according to their appearance. Some pseudopodial cells are able to use multiple types of pseudopodia depending on the situation. Most use a combination of
lamellipodia and
filopodia to migrate (e.g. metastatic cancer cells). Human
foreskin fibroblasts can either use lamellipodia- or lobopodia-based migration in a 3D matrix depending on the matrix elasticity.
Lamellipodia Lamellipodia are broad and flat pseudopodia used in locomotion.
Filopodia Filopodia (or filose pseudopods) are slender and filiform with pointed ends, consisting mainly of
ectoplasm. These formations are supported by
microfilaments which, unlike the filaments of lamellipodia with their net-like actin, form loose bundles by
cross-linking. This formation is partly due to bundling proteins such as
fimbrins and
fascins. Filopodia are observed in some animal cells: in part of
Filosa (
Rhizaria), in "
Testaceafilosia", in
Vampyrellidae and
Pseudosporida (
Rhizaria) and in
Nucleariida (
Opisthokonta). These finger-like, tubular pseudopodia contain both
ectoplasm and
endoplasm. They can be found in different kind of cells, notably in
Lobosa and other
Amoebozoa and in some
Heterolobosea (
Excavata). High-pressure lobopodia can also be found in human
fibroblasts travelling through a complex network of 3D
matrix (e.g. mammalian
dermis, cell-derived matrix). Contrarily to other pseudopodia using the pressure exerted by actin polymerization on the membrane to extend, fibroblast lobopods use the nuclear piston mechanism consisting in pulling the nucleus via actomyosin contractility to push the
cytoplasm that in turn push the membrane, leading to pseudopod formation. To occur, this lobopodia-based fibroblast migration needs
nesprin 3,
integrins,
RhoA,
ROCK and
myosin II. Otherwise, lobopods are often accompanied with small lateral
blebs forming along the side of the cell, probably due to the high intracellular pressure during lobopodia formation increasing the frequency of plasma membrane-cortex rupture.
Reticulopodia Reticulopodia (or reticulose pseudopods), are complex formations in which individual pseudopods are merged and form irregular nets. The primary function of reticulopodia, also known as myxopodia, is food ingestion, with locomotion a secondary function. Reticulopods are typical of
Foraminifera,
Chlorarachnea,
Gromia and
Filoreta (Rhizaria).
Axopodia Axopodia (also known as actinopodia) are narrow pseudopodia containing complex arrays of
microtubules enveloped by cytoplasm. Axopodia are mostly responsible for phagocytosis by rapidly retracting in response to physical contact. These pseudopodia are primarily food-collecting structures, but also provide a means of hydrological transportation via the expansion of their surface areas. They are observed in "
Radiolaria" and "
Heliozoa". ==References==