Mechanical control of tissue shape and morphogenetic flows during vertebrate body axis elongation

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Samhita P. Banavar - , University of California at Santa Barbara, Stanford University (Author)
  • Emmet K. Carn - , University of California at Santa Barbara (Author)
  • Payam Rowghanian - , University of California at Santa Barbara (Author)
  • Georgina Stooke-Vaughan - , University of California at Santa Barbara (Author)
  • Sangwoo Kim - , University of California at Santa Barbara (Author)
  • Otger Campàs - , Chair of Tissue Dynamics, Clusters of Excellence PoL: Physics of Life, University of California at Santa Barbara (Author)

Abstract

Shaping embryonic tissues into their functional morphologies requires cells to control the physical state of the tissue in space and time. While regional variations in cellular forces or cell proliferation have been typically assumed to be the main physical factors controlling tissue morphogenesis, recent experiments have revealed that spatial variations in the tissue physical (fluid/solid) state play a key role in shaping embryonic tissues. Here we theoretically study how the regional control of fluid and solid tissue states guides morphogenetic flows to shape the extending vertebrate body axis. Our results show that both the existence of a fluid-to-solid tissue transition along the anteroposterior axis and the tissue surface tension determine the shape of the tissue and its ability to elongate unidirectionally, with large tissue tensions preventing unidirectional elongation and promoting blob-like tissue expansions. We predict both the tissue morphogenetic flows and stresses that enable unidirectional axis elongation. Our results show the existence of a sharp transition in the structure of morphogenetic flows, from a flow with no vortices to a flow with two counter-rotating vortices, caused by a transition in the number and location of topological defects in the flow field. Finally, comparing the theoretical predictions to quantitative measurements of both tissue flows and shape during zebrafish body axis elongation, we show that the observed morphogenetic events can be explained by the existence of a fluid-to-solid tissue transition along the anteroposterior axis. These results highlight the role of spatiotemporally-controlled fluid-to-solid transitions in the tissue state as a physical mechanism of embryonic morphogenesis.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number8591
JournalScientific reports
Volume11
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 33883563

Keywords

ASJC Scopus subject areas