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Mechanical information is an important contributor to cell polarity in uni- and multicellular systems [1-3]. In planar tissues like the Drosophila wing, cell polarity reorients during growth as cells divide and reorganize [4]. In another planar tissue, the Arabidopsis leaf epidermis [5], polarized, asymmetric divisions of stomatal stem cells (meristemoid mother cells [MMCs]) are fundamental for the generation and patterning of multiple cell types, including stomata. The activity of key transcription factors, polarizing factors [6], and peptide signals [7] explains some local stomatal patterns emerging from the behavior of a few lineally related cells [6, 8-11]. Here we demonstrate that, in addition to locally acting signals, tissue-wide mechanical forces can act as organizing cues, and that they do so by influencing the polarity of individual MMCs. If the mechanical stress environment in the tissue is altered through stretching or cell ablations, cellular polarity changes in response. In turn, polarity predicts the orientation of cellular and tissue outgrowth, leading to increased mechanical conflicts between neighboring cells. This interplay among growth, oriented divisions, and cell specification could contribute to the characteristic patterning of stomatal guard cells in the context of a growing leaf.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2017.01.059 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
August 2025
Waksman Institute and Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Rutgers University, Piscataway NJ 08854 USA.
Proper organ shape is critical for function. The wing normally adopts an elongated shape, but mutations in the Dachsous-Fat pathway result in rounder wings. The mechanism by which this occurs has remained unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
August 2025
Molecular Cellular and Developmental Biology (MCD), Centre de Biologie Intégrative (CBI), Université de Toulouse, CNRS, UPS, 31000 Toulouse, France.
During animal development, cells communicate to ensure tissue-wide synchronization of differentiation. While several mechanisms contributing to cell coordination have been described, whether additional mechanisms are at play should cells locally desynchronize remains unknown. Here, we investigate the responses to experimentally induced desynchronized cells during epidermis development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
July 2025
School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing 10084, China; Institute of Neurosciences, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas-Universidad Miguel Hernández, San Juan de Alicante 03550, Spain. Electronic address:
The extracellular matrix is an essential determinant of animal form, enabling organization of cells and tissues into organs with complex shapes. In contrast with the dorso-ventrally flat Drosophila wing, its serial homolog, the haltere, adopts a globular shape thought to arise from a lack of matrix-mediated adhesion between its dorsal and ventral surfaces. Contradicting this model, however, matrix manipulations are known to deform halteres.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
June 2025
Department of Biology, Philipps University, Hans-Meerwein-Straße 6, Marburg 35043, Germany; Göttingen Campus Institute for Dynamics of Biological Networks (CIDBN), Georg August University, Heinrich-Düker-Weg 12, Göttingen 37073, Germany; Key Laboratory of Evolution & Marine Biodiversity (Ministr
Coordination of cell behavior is central to morphogenesis, when arrays of cells simultaneously undergo shape changes or dynamic rearrangements. In epithelia, cell shape changes invariably exert mechanical forces, which adjacent cells could sense to trigger an active response. However, molecular mechanisms for such mechano-transduction and especially their role for tissue-wide coordination in morphogenesis have remained ambiguous.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Protoc
September 2025
John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA.
Organoids are in vitro miniaturized cellular models of organs that offer opportunities for studying organ development, disease mechanisms and drug screening. Understanding the complex processes governing organoid development and function requires methods suitable for the continuous, long-term monitoring of cell activities (for example, electrophysiological and mechanical activity) at single-cell resolution throughout the entire three-dimensional (3D) structure. Cyborg organoid technology addresses this need by seamlessly integrating stretchable mesh nanoelectronics with tissue-like properties, such as tissue-level flexibility, subcellular feature size and mesh-like networks, into 3D organoids through a 2D-to-3D tissue reconfiguration process during organogenesis.
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