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A Geometric Tension Dynamics Model of Epithelial Convergent Extension.


ABSTRACT: Epithelial tissue elongation by convergent extension is a key motif of animal morphogenesis. On a coarse scale, cell motion resembles laminar fluid flow; yet in contrast to a fluid, epithelial cells adhere to each other and maintain the tissue layer under actively generated internal tension. To resolve this apparent paradox, we formulate a model in which tissue flow occurs through adiabatic remodelling of the cellular force balance causing local cell rearrangement. We propose that the gradual shifting of the force balance is caused by positive feedback on myosin-generated cytoskeletal tension. Shifting force balance within a tension network causes active T1s oriented by the global anisotropy of tension. Rigidity of cells against shape changes converts the oriented internal rearrangements into net tissue deformation. Strikingly, we find that the total amount of tissue extension depends on the initial magnitude of anisotropy and on cellular packing order. T1s degrade this order so that tissue flow is self-limiting. We explain these findings by showing that coordination of T1s depends on coherence in local tension configurations, quantified by a certain order parameter in tension space. Our model reproduces the salient tissue- and cell-scale features of germ band elongation during Drosophila gastrulation, in particular the slowdown of tissue flow after approximately twofold extension concomitant with a loss of order in tension configurations. This suggests local cell geometry contains morphogenetic information and yields predictions testable in future experiments. Furthermore, our focus on defining biologically controlled active tension dynamics on the manifold of force-balanced states may provide a general approach to the description of morphogenetic flow.

SUBMITTER: Claussen NH 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10705598 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A Geometric-tension-dynamics Model of Epithelial Convergent Extension.

Claussen Nikolas H NH   Brauns Fridtjof F   Shraiman Boris I BI  

ArXiv 20241002


Convergent extension of epithelial tissue is a key motif of animal morphogenesis. On a coarse scale, cell motion resembles laminar fluid flow; yet in contrast to a fluid, epithelial cells adhere to each other and maintain the tissue layer under actively generated internal tension. To resolve this apparent paradox, we formulate a model in which tissue flow in the tension-dominated regime occurs through adiabatic remodeling of force balance in the network of adherens junctions. We propose that the  ...[more]

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