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1.
Development ; 150(9)2023 05 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36946430

RESUMO

Collective cell rotations are widely used during animal organogenesis. Theoretical and in vitro studies have conceptualized rotating cells as identical rigid-point objects that stochastically break symmetry to move monotonously and perpetually within an inert environment. However, it is unclear whether this notion can be extrapolated to a natural context, where rotations are ephemeral and heterogeneous cellular cohorts interact with an active epithelium. In zebrafish neuromasts, nascent sibling hair cells invert positions by rotating ≤180° around their geometric center after acquiring different identities via Notch1a-mediated asymmetric repression of Emx2. Here, we show that this multicellular rotation is a three-phasic movement that progresses via coherent homotypic coupling and heterotypic junction remodeling. We found no correlation between rotations and epithelium-wide cellular flow or anisotropic resistive forces. Moreover, the Notch/Emx2 status of the cell dyad does not determine asymmetric interactions with the surrounding epithelium. Aided by computer modeling, we suggest that initial stochastic inhomogeneities generate a metastable state that poises cells to move and spontaneous intercellular coordination of the resulting instabilities enables persistently directional rotations, whereas Notch1a-determined symmetry breaking buffers rotational noise.


Assuntos
Células Ciliadas Auditivas , Peixe-Zebra , Animais , Microscopia de Vídeo , Epitélio , Mecanorreceptores
2.
Curr Biol ; 30(6): 1142-1151.e6, 2020 03 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32109392

RESUMO

Most plane-polarized tissues are formed by identically oriented cells [1, 2]. A notable exception occurs in the vertebrate vestibular system and lateral-line neuromasts, where mechanosensory hair cells orient along a single axis but in opposite directions to generate bipolar epithelia [3-5]. In zebrafish neuromasts, pairs of hair cells arise from the division of a non-sensory progenitor [6, 7] and acquire opposing planar polarity via the asymmetric expression of the polarity-determinant transcription factor Emx2 [8-11]. Here, we reveal the initial symmetry-breaking step by decrypting the developmental trajectory of hair cells using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), diffusion pseudotime analysis, lineage tracing, and mutagenesis. We show that Emx2 is absent in non-sensory epithelial cells, begins expression in hair-cell progenitors, and is downregulated in one of the sibling hair cells via signaling through the Notch1a receptor. Analysis of Emx2-deficient specimens, in which every hair cell adopts an identical direction, indicates that Emx2 asymmetry does not result from auto-regulatory feedback. These data reveal a two-tiered mechanism by which the symmetric monodirectional ground state of the epithelium is inverted by deterministic initiation of Emx2 expression in hair-cell progenitors and a subsequent stochastic repression of Emx2 in one of the sibling hair cells breaks directional symmetry to establish planar bipolarity.


Assuntos
Embrião não Mamífero/embriologia , Proteínas de Homeodomínio/genética , Sistema da Linha Lateral/embriologia , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/genética , Receptor Notch1/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Proteínas de Peixe-Zebra/genética , Peixe-Zebra/embriologia , Animais , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Proteínas de Homeodomínio/metabolismo , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/metabolismo , Receptor Notch1/metabolismo , Transdução de Sinais , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Peixe-Zebra/genética , Proteínas de Peixe-Zebra/metabolismo
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