Publication:
Fundamental physical cellular constraints drive self-organization of tissues.

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2015-11-23

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Sánchez-Gutiérrez, Daniel
Tozluoglu, Melda
Barry, Joseph D
Pascual, Alberto
Mao, Yanlan
Escudero, Luis M

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Abstract

Morphogenesis is driven by small cell shape changes that modulate tissue organization. Apical surfaces of proliferating epithelial sheets have been particularly well studied. Currently, it is accepted that a stereotyped distribution of cellular polygons is conserved in proliferating tissues among metazoans. In this work, we challenge these previous findings showing that diverse natural packed tissues have very different polygon distributions. We use Voronoi tessellations as a mathematical framework that predicts this diversity. We demonstrate that Voronoi tessellations and the very different tissues analysed share an overriding restriction: the frequency of polygon types correlates with the distribution of cell areas. By altering the balance of tensions and pressures within the packed tissues using disease, genetic or computer model perturbations, we show that as long as packed cells present a balance of forces within tissue, they will be under a physical constraint that limits its organization. Our discoveries establish a new framework to understand tissue architecture in development and disease.

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Animals
Cell Shape
Cells, Cultured
Chemical Phenomena
Chickens
Drosophila
Epithelial Cells
Humans
Hydrostatic Pressure
Models, Biological
Models, Theoretical
Morphogenesis

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Keywords

Voronoi diagrams, epithelial organization, morphogenesis, neuromuscular diseases

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