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Active Tension Network model suggests an exotic mechanical state realized in epithelial tissues. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mechanical interactions are essential for understanding how epithelial tissues develop, but the exact mechanisms linking stress and cell behavior are still not fully clear.
  • The Active Tension Network (ATN) model reveals that cells balance tension in a way that allows them to act like a fluid initially, then behave like a solid over time, showing unique mechanical properties.
  • The ATN predicts specific shapes that cells can take in equilibrium, which we see in certain epithelial tissues and in the development of fruit fly embryos, highlighting important aspects of early embryonic development.

Article Abstract

Mechanical interactions play a crucial role in epithelial morphogenesis, yet understanding the complex mechanisms through which stress and deformation affect cell behavior remains an open problem. Here we formulate and analyze the Active Tension Network (ATN) model, which assumes that the mechanical balance of cells within a tissue is dominated by cortical tension and introduces tension-dependent active remodeling of the cortex. We find that ATNs exhibit unusual mechanical properties. Specifically, an ATN behaves as a fluid at short times, but at long times supports external tension like a solid. Furthermore, an ATN has an extensively degenerate equilibrium mechanical state associated with a discrete conformal - "isogonal" - deformation of cells. The ATN model predicts a constraint on equilibrium cell geometries, which we demonstrate to approximately hold in certain epithelial tissues. We further show that isogonal modes are observed in the fruit y embryo, accounting for the striking variability of apical areas of ventral cells and helping understand the early phase of gastrulation. Living matter realizes new and exotic mechanical states, the study of which helps to understand biological phenomena.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6344062PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nphys4219DOI Listing

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