Cell Division and Motility Enable Hexatic Order in Biological Tissues.
Phys Rev Lett
; 132(21): 218402, 2024 May 24.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38856284
ABSTRACT
Biological tissues transform between solid- and liquidlike states in many fundamental physiological events. Recent experimental observations further suggest that in two-dimensional epithelial tissues these solid-liquid transformations can happen via intermediate states akin to the intermediate hexatic phases observed in equilibrium two-dimensional melting. The hexatic phase is characterized by quasi-long-range (power-law) orientational order but no translational order, thus endowing some structure to an otherwise structureless fluid. While it has been shown that hexatic order in tissue models can be induced by motility and thermal fluctuations, the role of cell division and apoptosis (birth and death) has remained poorly understood, despite its fundamental biological role. Here we study the effect of cell division and apoptosis on global hexatic order within the framework of the self-propelled Voronoi model of tissue. Although cell division naively destroys order and active motility facilitates deformations, we show that their combined action drives a liquid-hexatic-liquid transformation as the motility increases. The hexatic phase is accessed by the delicate balance of dislocation defect generation from cell division and the active binding of disclination-antidisclination pairs from motility. We formulate a mean-field model to elucidate this competition between cell division and motility and the consequent development of hexatic order.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Cell Division
/
Cell Movement
/
Models, Biological
Language:
En
Journal:
Phys Rev Lett
/
Phys. rev. lett
/
Physical review letters
Year:
2024
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Country of publication: