4.8 Article

Triggering a Cell Shape Change by Exploiting Preexisting Actomyosin Contractions

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 335, Issue 6073, Pages 1232-1235

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1217869

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 GM083071, R01 GM33830]
  2. Human Frontier Science Program

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Apical constriction changes cell shapes, driving critical morphogenetic events, including gastrulation in diverse organisms and neural tube closure in vertebrates. Apical constriction is thought to be triggered by contraction of apical actomyosin networks. We found that apical actomyosin contractions began before cell shape changes in both Caenorhabitis elegans and Drosophila. In C. elegans, actomyosin networks were initially dynamic, contracting and generating cortical tension without substantial shrinking of apical surfaces. Apical cell-cell contact zones and actomyosin only later moved increasingly in concert, with no detectable change in actomyosin dynamics or cortical tension. Thus, apical constriction appears to be triggered not by a change in cortical tension, but by dynamic linking of apical cell-cell contact zones to an already contractile apical cortex.

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