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1.
PLoS Biol ; 22(4): e3002611, 2024 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38683880

As tissues grow and change shape during animal development, they physically pull and push on each other, and these mechanical interactions can be important for morphogenesis. During Drosophila gastrulation, mesoderm invagination temporally overlaps with the convergence and extension of the ectodermal germband; the latter is caused primarily by Myosin II-driven polarised cell intercalation. Here, we investigate the impact of mesoderm invagination on ectoderm extension, examining possible mechanical and mechanotransductive effects on Myosin II recruitment and polarised cell intercalation. We find that the germband ectoderm is deformed by the mesoderm pulling in the orthogonal direction to germband extension (GBE), showing mechanical coupling between these tissues. However, we do not find a significant change in Myosin II planar polarisation in response to mesoderm invagination, nor in the rate of junction shrinkage leading to neighbour exchange events. We conclude that the main cellular mechanism of axis extension, polarised cell intercalation, is robust to the mesoderm invagination pull. We find, however, that mesoderm invagination slows down the rate of anterior-posterior cell elongation that contributes to axis extension, counteracting the tension from the endoderm invagination, which pulls along the direction of GBE.


Drosophila melanogaster , Ectoderm , Gastrulation , Mesoderm , Myosin Type II , Animals , Mesoderm/embryology , Mesoderm/cytology , Gastrulation/physiology , Ectoderm/cytology , Ectoderm/embryology , Ectoderm/metabolism , Myosin Type II/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/embryology , Cell Polarity , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Embryo, Nonmammalian , Morphogenesis , Body Patterning/physiology , Drosophila/embryology
2.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 18(1): e1009812, 2022 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35089922

Cell intercalation is a key cell behaviour of morphogenesis and wound healing, where local cell neighbour exchanges can cause dramatic tissue deformations such as body axis extension. Substantial experimental work has identified the key molecular players facilitating intercalation, but there remains a lack of consensus and understanding of their physical roles. Existing biophysical models that represent cell-cell contacts with single edges cannot study cell neighbour exchange as a continuous process, where neighbouring cell cortices must uncouple. Here, we develop an Apposed-Cortex Adhesion Model (ACAM) to understand active cell intercalation behaviours in the context of a 2D epithelial tissue. The junctional actomyosin cortex of every cell is modelled as a continuous viscoelastic rope-loop, explicitly representing cortices facing each other at bicellular junctions and the adhesion molecules that couple them. The model parameters relate directly to the properties of the key subcellular players that drive dynamics, providing a multi-scale understanding of cell behaviours. We show that active cell neighbour exchanges can be driven by purely junctional mechanisms. Active contractility and cortical turnover in a single bicellular junction are sufficient to shrink and remove a junction. Next, a new, orthogonal junction extends passively. The ACAM reveals how the turnover of adhesion molecules regulates tension transmission and junction deformation rates by controlling slippage between apposed cell cortices. The model additionally predicts that rosettes, which form when a vertex becomes common to many cells, are more likely to occur in actively intercalating tissues with strong friction from adhesion molecules.


Actomyosin , Adherens Junctions , Actomyosin/metabolism , Adherens Junctions/physiology , Cell Adhesion , Cell Adhesion Molecules/metabolism , Epithelium/metabolism , Morphogenesis
3.
Curr Biol ; 31(15): 3409-3418.e6, 2021 08 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34111402

Epithelial tissues are highly sensitive to anisotropies in mechanical force, with cells altering fundamental behaviors, such as cell adhesion, migration, and cell division.1-5 It is well known that, in the later stages of carcinoma (epithelial cancer), the presence of tumors alters the mechanical properties of a host tissue and that these changes contribute to disease progression.6-9 However, in the earliest stages of carcinoma, when a clonal cluster of oncogene-expressing cells first establishes in the epithelium, the extent to which mechanical changes alter cell behavior in the tissue as a whole remains unclear. This is despite knowledge that many common oncogenes, such as oncogenic Ras, alter cell stiffness and contractility.10-13 Here, we investigate how mechanical changes at the cellular level of an oncogenic cluster can translate into the generation of anisotropic strain across an epithelium, altering cell behavior in neighboring host tissue. We generated clusters of oncogene-expressing cells within otherwise normal in vivo epithelium, using Xenopus laevis embryos. We find that cells in kRasV12, but not cMYC, clusters have increased contractility, which introduces radial stress in the tissue and deforms surrounding host cells. The strain imposed by kRasV12 clusters leads to increased cell division and altered division orientation in neighboring host tissue, effects that can be rescued by reducing actomyosin contractility specifically in the kRasV12 cells. Our findings indicate that some oncogenes can alter the mechanical and proliferative properties of host tissue from the earliest stages of cancer development, changes that have the potential to contribute to tumorigenesis.


Cell Division , Neoplasms , Oncogenes , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras) , Animals , Anisotropy , Carcinogenesis/genetics , Neoplasms/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)/genetics , Xenopus laevis
4.
PLoS Biol ; 17(12): e3000522, 2019 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31805038

In epithelia, tricellular vertices are emerging as important sites for the regulation of epithelial integrity and function. Compared to bicellular contacts, however, much less is known. In particular, resident proteins at tricellular vertices were identified only at occluding junctions, with none known at adherens junctions (AJs). In a previous study, we discovered that in Drosophila embryos, the adhesion molecule Sidekick (Sdk), well-known in invertebrates and vertebrates for its role in the visual system, localises at tricellular vertices at the level of AJs. Here, we survey a wide range of Drosophila epithelia and establish that Sdk is a resident protein at tricellular AJs (tAJs), the first of its kind. Clonal analysis showed that two cells, rather than three cells, contributing Sdk are sufficient for tAJ localisation. Super-resolution imaging using structured illumination reveals that Sdk proteins form string-like structures at vertices. Postulating that Sdk may have a role in epithelia where AJs are actively remodelled, we analysed the phenotype of sdk null mutant embryos during Drosophila axis extension using quantitative methods. We find that apical cell shapes are abnormal in sdk mutants, suggesting a defect in tissue remodelling during convergence and extension. Moreover, adhesion at apical vertices is compromised in rearranging cells, with apical tears in the cortex forming and persisting throughout axis extension, especially at the centres of rosettes. Finally, we show that polarised cell intercalation is decreased in sdk mutants. Mathematical modelling of the cell behaviours supports the notion that the T1 transitions of polarised cell intercalation are delayed in sdk mutants, in particular in rosettes. We propose that this delay, in combination with a change in the mechanical properties of the converging and extending tissue, causes the abnormal apical cell shapes in sdk mutant embryos.


Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/embryology , Eye Proteins/metabolism , Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules/metabolism , Tight Junctions/physiology , Adherens Junctions/metabolism , Animals , Cell Adhesion , Cell Adhesion Molecules/metabolism , Cell Polarity/physiology , Drosophila Proteins/physiology , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Epithelium/metabolism , Eye Proteins/physiology , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules/physiology
5.
Cell Rep ; 26(8): 2088-2100.e4, 2019 02 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30784591

Distinct mechanisms involving cell shape and mechanical force are known to influence the rate and orientation of division in cultured cells. However, uncoupling the impact of shape and force in tissues remains challenging. Combining stretching of Xenopus tissue with mathematical methods of inferring relative mechanical stress, we find separate roles for cell shape and mechanical stress in orienting and cueing division. We demonstrate that division orientation is best predicted by an axis of cell shape defined by the position of tricellular junctions (TCJs), which align with local cell stress rather than tissue-level stress. The alignment of division to cell shape requires functional cadherin and the localization of the spindle orientation protein, LGN, to TCJs but is not sensitive to relative cell stress magnitude. In contrast, proliferation rate is more directly regulated by mechanical stress, being correlated with relative isotropic stress and decoupled from cell shape when myosin II is depleted.


Cell Shape , Epithelial Cells/physiology , Mitosis , Stress, Mechanical , Animals , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Female , Intercellular Junctions , Male , Models, Theoretical , Spindle Apparatus , Xenopus laevis
6.
Dev Cell ; 47(4): 439-452.e6, 2018 11 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30318244

Adherens junctions are tensile structures that couple epithelial cells together. Junctional tension can arise from cell-intrinsic application of contractility or from the cell-extrinsic forces of tissue movement. Here, we report a mechanosensitive signaling pathway that activates RhoA at adherens junctions to preserve epithelial integrity in response to acute tensile stress. We identify Myosin VI as the force sensor, whose association with E-cadherin is enhanced when junctional tension is increased by mechanical monolayer stress. Myosin VI promotes recruitment of the heterotrimeric Gα12 protein to E-cadherin, where it signals for p114 RhoGEF to activate RhoA. Despite its potential to stimulate junctional actomyosin and further increase contractility, tension-activated RhoA signaling is necessary to preserve epithelial integrity. This is explained by an increase in tensile strength, especially at the multicellular vertices of junctions, that is due to mDia1-mediated actin assembly.


Adherens Junctions/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Epithelium/metabolism , Stress, Mechanical , rhoA GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Actins/metabolism , Actomyosin/metabolism , Cadherins/metabolism , Humans , Tensile Strength
7.
Phys Rev E ; 97(5-1): 052409, 2018 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29906905

We consider a cellular monolayer, described using a vertex-based model, for which cells form a spatially disordered array of convex polygons that tile the plane. Equilibrium cell configurations are assumed to minimize a global energy defined in terms of cell areas and perimeters; energy is dissipated via dynamic area and length changes, as well as cell neighbor exchanges. The model captures our observations of an epithelium from a Xenopus embryo showing that uniaxial stretching induces spatial ordering, with cells under net tension (compression) tending to align with (against) the direction of stretch, but with the stress remaining heterogeneous at the single-cell level. We use the vertex model to derive the linearized relation between tissue-level stress, strain, and strain rate about a deformed base state, which can be used to characterize the tissue's anisotropic mechanical properties; expressions for viscoelastic tissue moduli are given as direct sums over cells. When the base state is isotropic, the model predicts that tissue properties can be tuned to a regime with high elastic shear resistance but low resistance to area changes, or vice versa.


Mechanical Phenomena , Animals , Anisotropy , Biomechanical Phenomena , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Shear Strength , Stress, Mechanical , Xenopus/embryology
8.
Math Med Biol ; 35(suppl_1): 1-27, 2018 03 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28992197

Using a popular vertex-based model to describe a spatially disordered planar epithelial monolayer, we examine the relationship between cell shape and mechanical stress at the cell and tissue level. Deriving expressions for stress tensors starting from an energetic formulation of the model, we show that the principal axes of stress for an individual cell align with the principal axes of shape, and we determine the bulk effective tissue pressure when the monolayer is isotropic at the tissue level. Using simulations for a monolayer that is not under peripheral stress, we fit parameters of the model to experimental data for Xenopus embryonic tissue. The model predicts that mechanical interactions can generate mesoscopic patterns within the monolayer that exhibit long-range correlations in cell shape. The model also suggests that the orientation of mechanical and geometric cues for processes such as cell division are likely to be strongly correlated in real epithelia. Some limitations of the model in capturing geometric features of Xenopus epithelial cells are highlighted.


Cell Shape/physiology , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Epithelial Cells/physiology , Models, Biological , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Computer Simulation , Elastic Modulus , Epithelium/embryology , Epithelium/physiology , Mathematical Concepts , Stress, Mechanical , Xenopus laevis/embryology
9.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 34: 133-9, 2014 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25080021

The mechanical environment of a cell has a profound effect on its behaviour, from dictating cell shape to driving the transcription of specific genes. Recent studies have demonstrated that mechanical forces play a key role in orienting the mitotic spindle, and therefore cell division, in both single cells and tissues. Whilst the molecular machinery that mediates the link between external force and the mitotic spindle remains largely unknown, it is becoming increasingly clear that this is a widely used mechanism which could prove vital for coordinating cell division orientation across tissues in a variety of contexts.


Mitosis , Spindle Apparatus/physiology , Actins/physiology , Animals , Biomechanical Phenomena , Cell Shape , Humans , Myosins/physiology , Protein Transport
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