4.8 Article

In vivo visualization of butterfly scale cell morphogenesis in Vanessa cardui

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2112009118

Keywords

metamorphosis; butterfly scales; biological structure formation; in vivo quantitative phase imaging; cuticle secretion

Funding

  1. National Science Foun-dation [DMREF-1922321]
  2. CBET program on Particulate and Multiphase Processes [1804241]
  3. NIH [P41EB015871, R21GM140613, R01HL158102, R01DA045549, U01CA202177, DE-FOA-0002359]
  4. Hamamatsu Corporation
  5. Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology
  6. Hong Kong Innovation and Technology Consortium
  7. Singapore-MIT Al-liance for Research and Technology Center-Critical Analytics for Manufactur-ing Personalized-Medicine Interdisciplinary Research Group (SMART CAMP IRG)
  8. HARDi Holdings Limited
  9. Fujikura Ltd.
  10. Department of Energy [DE-FOA-0002359]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

During metamorphosis, butterfly wings develop hundreds of thousands of scales with intricate microstructures and nanostructures, which determine the wings' optical appearance, wetting characteristics, thermodynamic properties, and aerodynamic behavior. Understanding the dynamic processes and temporal coordination required to sculpt the scales' structural features is critical for fully understanding scale formation. Continuous, in vivo imaging of growing scale cells allows for the establishment of a morphological timeline of wing scale formation and quantitative insights into the patterning and growth processes involved.
During metamorphosis, the wings of a butterfly sprout hundreds of thousands of scales with intricate microstructures and nanostructures that determine the wings' optical appearance, wetting characteristics, thermodynamic properties, and aerodynamic behavior. Although the functional characteristics of scales are well known and prove desirable in various applications, the dynamic processes and temporal coordination required to sculpt the scales' many structural features remain poorly understood. Current knowledge of scale growth is primarily gained from ex vivo studies of fixed scale cells at discrete time points; to fully understand scale formation, it is critical to characterize the time-dependent morphological changes throughout their development. Here, we report the continuous, in vivo, label-free imaging of growing scale cells of Vanessa cardui using speckle-correlation reflection phase microscopy. By capturing time-resolved volumetric tissue data together with nanoscale surface height information, we establish a morphological timeline of wing scale formation and gain quantitative insights into the underlying processes involved in scale cell patterning and growth. We identify early differences in the patterning of cover and ground scales on the young wing and quantify geometrical parameters of growing scale features, which suggest that surface growth is critical to structure formation. Our quantitative, time-resolved in vivo imaging of butterfly scale development provides the foundation for decoding the processes and biomechanical principles involved in the formation of functional structures in biological materials.

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