Abstract
While migratory cells can quickly change their mode of migration in complex three-dimensional environments, it is not clear why. Understanding the dynamic and reciprocal relationship migrating cells have with their microenvironments may help reveal why migratory plasticity, or mode-switching, is a common feature of eukaryotic cell motility. In this review, we discuss the physical and mechanical properties of cells and the environments they move through, and how those properties can influence each other. Given the dual role of the cytoskeleton in cell migration and cellular mechanics, we suggest that migratory plasticity derives from the necessity for the cell to maintain mechanical homeostasis in diverse physical environments.