Filopodial-Tension Model of Convergent-Extension of Tissues
Author(s) -
Julio M. Belmonte,
Maciej Swat,
James A. Glazier
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
plos computational biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.628
H-Index - 182
eISSN - 1553-7358
pISSN - 1553-734X
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004952
Subject(s) - convergent extension , planar , polarity (international relations) , perpendicular , biophysics , cell polarity , tension (geology) , asymmetry , cell , chemistry , physics , biology , geometry , microbiology and biotechnology , compression (physics) , gastrulation , mathematics , computer science , thermodynamics , embryo , biochemistry , computer graphics (images) , quantum mechanics , embryogenesis
In convergent-extension ( CE ), a planar-polarized epithelial tissue elongates ( extends ) in-plane in one direction while shortening ( converging ) in the perpendicular in-plane direction, with the cells both elongating and intercalating along the converging axis. CE occurs during the development of most multicellular organisms. Current CE models assume cell or tissue asymmetry, but neglect the preferential filopodial activity along the convergent axis observed in many tissues. We propose a cell-based CE model based on asymmetric filopodial tension forces between cells and investigate how cell-level filopodial interactions drive tissue-level CE. The final tissue geometry depends on the balance between external rounding forces and cell-intercalation traction. Filopodial-tension CE is robust to relatively high levels of planar cell polarity misalignment and to the presence of non-active cells. Addition of a simple mechanical feedback between cells fully rescues and even improves CE of tissues with high levels of polarity misalignments. Our model extends easily to three dimensions, with either one converging and two extending axes, or two converging and one extending axes, producing distinct tissue morphologies, as observed in vivo .
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