4.7 Article

Remodeling of adhesion and modulation of mechanical tensile forces during apoptosis in Drosophila epithelium

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 144, Issue 1, Pages 95-105

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.139865

Keywords

Apoptosis; Cell adhesion; Drosophila; Force; Tissue mechanics

Funding

  1. NUS Research Scholarship from the National University of Singapore
  2. Mechanobiology Institute, Singapore
  3. National University of Singapore
  4. Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory
  5. Ministry of Education - Singapore Tier 2 grant [MOE2015-T2-1-116]
  6. PHC Merlion Programme of the Institut Francais de Singapour [5.14.13]

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Apoptosis is amechanism of eliminating damaged or unnecessary cells during development and tissue homeostasis. During apoptosis within a tissue, the adhesions between dying and neighboring non-dying cells need to be remodeled so that the apoptotic cell is expelled. In parallel, contraction of actomyosin cables formed in apoptotic and neighboring cells drives cell extrusion. To date, the coordination between the dynamics of cell adhesion and the progressive changes in tissue tension around an apoptotic cell is not fully understood. Live imaging of histoblast expansion, which is a coordinated tissue replacement process during Drosophila metamorphosis, shows remodeling of adherens junctions (AJs) between apoptotic and non-dying cells, with a reduction in the levels of AJ components, including E-cadherin. Concurrently, surrounding tissue tension is transiently released. Contraction of a supra-cellular actomyosin cable, which forms in neighboring cells, brings neighboring cells together and further reshapes tissue tension toward the completion of extrusion. We propose a model in which modulation of tissue tension represents a mechanism of apoptotic cell extrusion.

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