Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Modeling Epithelial Morphogenesis and Cell Rearrangement during Zebrafish Epiboly: Tissue Deformation, Cell-Cell Coupling, and the Mechanical Response to Stress
View through CrossRef
AbstractMorphogenesis in early development involves complex and extreme deformations in response to intra- and intercellular forces. Zebrafish epiboly, the spreading of the blastoderm to cover and engulf the large yolk cell, is a key early event that sets the stage for the establishment of the body plan, but the way the forces driving expansion are generated and mediated is poorly understood. The enveloping layer (EVL), the thin squamous outer epithelium of the blastoderm, plays a central role. Forces generated in the yolk cell are transmitted through tight junctions to the marginal EVL cells, and then propagate through the rest of the EVL. To understand mechanisms of force generation and transduction during epiboly, we first need a mechanical model of the EVL capable of responding to such forces and undergoing the drastic deformation of epiboly. The expanding EVL more than doubles its surface area and experiences significant shear as it deforms from a thin cap at one pole to become a complete sphere, necessarily requiring extensive internal rearrangement. We constructed an agent-based model of the EVL and its response to exogenous forces using the center-based simulation framework, Tissue Forge. Our model captures the large viscoelastic deformation of the EVL by cell rearrangement, and incorporates algorithmic strategies to accommodate these dynamic changes while maintaining tissue cohesion. Features observed in living embryos, such as the straightening of the initially ragged leading edge, also emerge in the model. We identified two key components required for realistic epiboly in the model: first, a mechanism to enable tissue remodeling by cell rearrangement without tearing the tissue, and second, a negative feedback on the forces driving EVL expansion, to regulate and synchronize the advancement of the EVL margin. We discuss the implications of these findings for the behavior of living EVL and the mechanisms that drive epiboly.
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Title: Modeling Epithelial Morphogenesis and Cell Rearrangement during Zebrafish Epiboly: Tissue Deformation, Cell-Cell Coupling, and the Mechanical Response to Stress
Description:
AbstractMorphogenesis in early development involves complex and extreme deformations in response to intra- and intercellular forces.
Zebrafish epiboly, the spreading of the blastoderm to cover and engulf the large yolk cell, is a key early event that sets the stage for the establishment of the body plan, but the way the forces driving expansion are generated and mediated is poorly understood.
The enveloping layer (EVL), the thin squamous outer epithelium of the blastoderm, plays a central role.
Forces generated in the yolk cell are transmitted through tight junctions to the marginal EVL cells, and then propagate through the rest of the EVL.
To understand mechanisms of force generation and transduction during epiboly, we first need a mechanical model of the EVL capable of responding to such forces and undergoing the drastic deformation of epiboly.
The expanding EVL more than doubles its surface area and experiences significant shear as it deforms from a thin cap at one pole to become a complete sphere, necessarily requiring extensive internal rearrangement.
We constructed an agent-based model of the EVL and its response to exogenous forces using the center-based simulation framework, Tissue Forge.
Our model captures the large viscoelastic deformation of the EVL by cell rearrangement, and incorporates algorithmic strategies to accommodate these dynamic changes while maintaining tissue cohesion.
Features observed in living embryos, such as the straightening of the initially ragged leading edge, also emerge in the model.
We identified two key components required for realistic epiboly in the model: first, a mechanism to enable tissue remodeling by cell rearrangement without tearing the tissue, and second, a negative feedback on the forces driving EVL expansion, to regulate and synchronize the advancement of the EVL margin.
We discuss the implications of these findings for the behavior of living EVL and the mechanisms that drive epiboly.
Related Results
Spatiotemporal characterization of dynamic epithelial filopodia during zebrafish epiboly
Spatiotemporal characterization of dynamic epithelial filopodia during zebrafish epiboly
AbstractBackgroundDuring zebrafish epiboly, the embryonic cell mass, or blastoderm, spreads to enclose the yolk cell. The blastoderm consists of an outer epithelial sheet, the enve...
Alternatives in Animal Research: The Zebrafish Option
Alternatives in Animal Research: The Zebrafish Option
The utilisation of animals in scientific research has been a longstanding subject of debate, with concerns about animal welfare and ethics. In response, researchers have been inves...
Abstract 1581: Tumor suppressor functions of the zebrafish ink4ab: a novel cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor.
Abstract 1581: Tumor suppressor functions of the zebrafish ink4ab: a novel cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor.
Abstract
The human INK4b-ARF-INK4a genetic locus encodes two closely related members of the INK4 family of cyclin dependent kinase inhibitors, p15INK4b and p16INK4a ...
Abstract 1273: Adaptive immunity in a zebrafish model of melanoma.
Abstract 1273: Adaptive immunity in a zebrafish model of melanoma.
Abstract
The recent success of the anti-CLTA-4 antibody, ipilimumab, for late stage metastatic melanoma, provides proof of principle that stimulating the immune syst...
A Genetic Screen for Temperature-sensitive Morphogenesis-defective
Caenorhabditis elegans
Mutants
A Genetic Screen for Temperature-sensitive Morphogenesis-defective
Caenorhabditis elegans
Mutants
ABSTRACT
Morphogenesis involves coordinated cell migrations and cell shape changes that generate tissues and organs, and organize the body plan. ...
A novel nanoluciferase transgenic reporter to measure proteinuria in zebrafish
A novel nanoluciferase transgenic reporter to measure proteinuria in zebrafish
Abstract
The zebrafish is an important animal system for modelling human diseases. This includes kidney dysfunction as the embryonic kidney (pron...
Rearranged zebrafish genomic DNA induces zebrafish mutant after microinjection into fertilized egg and preliminary study of the mechanism
Rearranged zebrafish genomic DNA induces zebrafish mutant after microinjection into fertilized egg and preliminary study of the mechanism
Abstract
Genomic DNA of zebrafish was first digested incompletely with
Msp I
, and then the fragments were jo...

