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Download fileSpatiotemporal Oscillation in Confined Epithelial Motion upon Fluid-to-Solid Transition
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posted on 12.04.2021, 18:37 by Jing Yu, Pingqiang Cai, Xiaoqian Zhang, Tiankai Zhao, Linlin Liang, Sulin Zhang, Hong Liu, Xiaodong ChenFluid-to-solid phase transition in
multicellular assembly is crucial
in many developmental biological processes, such as embryogenesis
and morphogenesis. However, biomechanical studies in this area are
limited, and little is known about factors governing the transition
and how cell behaviors are regulated. Due to different stresses present,
cells could behave distinctively depending on the nature of tissue.
Here we report a fluid-to-solid transition in geometrically confined
multicellular assemblies. Under circular confinement, Madin-Darby
canine kidney (MDCK) monolayers undergo spatiotemporally oscillatory
motions that are strongly dependent on the confinement size and distance
from the periphery of the monolayers. Nanomechanical mapping reveals
that epithelial tensional stress and traction forces on the substrate
are both dependent on confinement size. The oscillation pattern and
cellular nanomechanics profile appear well correlated with stress
fiber assembly and cell polarization. These experimental observations
imply that the confinement size-dependent surface tension regulates
actin fiber assembly, cellular force generation, and cell polarization.
Our analyses further suggest a characteristic confinement size (approximates
to MDCK’s natural correlation length) below which surface tension
is sufficiently high and triggers a fluid-to-solid transition of the
monolayers. Our findings may shed light on the geometrical and nanomechanical
control of tissue morphogenesis and growth.