4.8 Article

Embryo mechanics cartography: inference of 3D force atlases from fluorescence microscopy

Journal

NATURE METHODS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41592-023-02084-7

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In this study, a computational method called 'foambryo' is proposed to infer spatiotemporal atlases of cellular forces from fluorescence microscopy images. The method is validated and shown to be biologically relevant. It can be used to gain new insights into the regulation of cell mechanics in developing embryos.
Tissue morphogenesis results from a tight interplay between gene expression, biochemical signaling and mechanics. Although sequencing methods allow the generation of cell-resolved spatiotemporal maps of gene expression, creating similar maps of cell mechanics in three-dimensional (3D) developing tissues has remained a real challenge. Exploiting the foam-like arrangement of cells, we propose a robust end-to-end computational method called 'foambryo' to infer spatiotemporal atlases of cellular forces from fluorescence microscopy images of cell membranes. Our method generates precise 3D meshes of cells' geometry and successively predicts relative cell surface tensions and pressures. We validate it with 3D foam simulations, study its noise sensitivity and prove its biological relevance in mouse, ascidian and worm embryos. 3D force inference allows us to recover mechanical features identified previously, but also predicts new ones, unveiling potential new insights on the spatiotemporal regulation of cell mechanics in developing embryos. Our code is freely available and paves the way for unraveling the unknown mechanochemical feedbacks that control embryo and tissue morphogenesis. Foambryo is an analysis pipeline for three-dimensional force-inference measurements in developing embryos.

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