Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2020; Denver, Colorado
Session L26: Mechanics of Cells and Tissues Across Scales V
8:00 AM–10:48 AM,
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Room: 403
Sponsoring
Units:
DBIO DSOFT GSNP DPOLY
Chair: Nancy Forde, Simon Fraser University
Abstract: L26.00006 : Length regulation of epithelial cell junctions
Presenter:
Michael Staddon
(University College London)
Authors:
Michael Staddon
(University College London)
Kate E Cavanaugh
(University of Chicago)
Edwin M Munro
(University of Chicago)
Margaret Gardel
(University of Chicago)
Shiladitya Banerjee
(University College London)
Morphogenesis of epithelial tissues involve precise spatiotemporal coordination of cell shape changes. In vivo, many morphogenetic events are driven by pulsatile contractions of intercellular junctions, producing irreversible deformations at tissue scales. The biophysical functions of these oscillatory contractions and the significance of their temporal structure remain unknown. Here, we combine theory and experiments to demonstrate that pulsatory contractions serve as a mechanical ratchet to guide directed morphogenesis. We propose a new theory for epithelial tissue mechanics that highlights two essential properties of intercellular junctions. First, epithelial junctions must overcome a critical strain threshold to trigger irreversible tension remodelling and junction length changes. Second, continuous relaxation of junctional strain promotes gradual loss of mechanical memory from the system, which makes the system refractory to continuous input, enabling frequency-dependent modulation of cell shape changes via junctional ratcheting. Taken together, the combination of mechanosensitive tension remodelling and strain relaxation provides a robust mechanism for directed tissue morphogenesis and the maintenance of tissue homeostasis in response to small amplitude contractions.
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