4.4 Article

Adaptive viscoelasticity of epithelial cell junctions: from models to methods

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CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gde.2020.05.018

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资金

  1. HHMI Gilliam Fellowship
  2. National Academies of Sciences Ford Foundation Fellowship
  3. N.I.H. training grant [GM007183]
  4. NIH [RO1 GM104032]
  5. UChicago MRSEC - National Science Foundation [DMR-1420709]
  6. EPSRC funded PhD studentship at UCL
  7. Heising-Simons Foundation
  8. Simons Foundation
  9. National Science Foundation [NSF PHY1748958]
  10. Royal Society [URF/R1/180187]
  11. HFSP [RGY0073/2018]

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Epithelial morphogenesis relies on constituent cells' ability to finely tune their mechanical properties. Resulting elastic-like and viscous-like behaviors arise from mechanochemical signaling coordinated spatiotemporally at cell-cell interfaces. Direct measurement of junction rheology can mechanistically dissect mechanical deformations and their molecular origins. However, the physical basis of junction viscoelasticity has only recently become experimentally tractable. Pioneering studies have uncovered exciting findings on the nature of contractile forces and junction deformations, inspiring a fundamentally new way of understanding morphogenesis. Here, we discuss novel techniques that directly test junctional mechanics and describe the relevant Vertex Models, and adaptations thereof, capturing these data. We then present the concept of adaptive tissue viscoelasticity, revealed by optogenetic junction manipulation. Finally, we offer future perspectives on this rapidly evolving field describing the material basis of tissue morphogenesis.

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