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1.
Cells Dev ; : 203829, 2023 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36894438
2.
Cells Dev ; 171: 203804, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36030184
3.
Cells Dev ; 170: 203792, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35659890
4.
Cells Dev ; : 203766, 2022 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35241413
5.
Cells Dev ; : 203765, 2022 Feb 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35123949
6.
Curr Biol ; 32(6): 1285-1300.e4, 2022 03 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35167804

ABSTRACT

During development, multicellular organisms undergo stereotypical patterns of tissue growth in space and time. How developmental growth is orchestrated remains unclear, largely due to the difficulty of observing and quantitating this process in a living organism. Drosophila histoblast nests are small clusters of progenitor epithelial cells that undergo extensive growth to give rise to the adult abdominal epidermis and are amenable to live imaging. Our quantitative analysis of histoblast proliferation and tissue mechanics reveals that tissue growth is driven by cell divisions initiated through basal extracellular matrix degradation by matrix metalloproteases secreted by the neighboring larval epidermal cells. Laser ablations and computational simulations show that tissue mechanical tension does not decrease as the histoblasts fill the abdominal epidermal surface. During tissue growth, the histoblasts display oscillatory cell division rates until growth termination occurs through the rapid emergence of G0/G1 arrested cells, rather than a gradual increase in cell-cycle time as observed in other systems such as the Drosophila wing and mouse postnatal epidermis. Different developing tissues can therefore achieve their final size using distinct growth termination strategies. Thus, adult abdominal epidermal development is characterized by changes in the tissue microenvironment and a rapid exit from the cell cycle.


Subject(s)
Drosophila , Epidermal Cells , Animals , Cell Cycle , Cell Division , Epidermis , Mice
7.
Cells Dev ; 168: 203756, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34782302
8.
Cells Dev ; 167: 203733, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34452879
9.
Cells Dev ; 166: 203703, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34119892
10.
Cells Dev ; 166: 203689, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34111643
11.
Cells Dev ; 166: 203675, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34051672
12.
Cells Dev ; 166: 203676, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34051673
13.
Phys Rev Lett ; 121(23): 238102, 2018 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30576196

ABSTRACT

Cell division and death can be regulated by the mechanical forces within a tissue. We study the consequences for the stability and roughness of a propagating interface by analyzing a model of mechanically regulated tissue growth in the regime of small driving forces. For an interface driven by homeostatic pressure imbalance or leader-cell motility, long and intermediate-wavelength instabilities arise, depending, respectively, on an effective viscosity of cell number change, and on substrate friction. A further mechanism depends on the strength of directed motility forces acting in the bulk. We analyze the fluctuations of a stable interface subjected to cell-level stochasticity, and find that mechanical feedback can help preserve reproducibility at the tissue scale. Our results elucidate mechanisms that could be important for orderly interface motion in developing tissues.


Subject(s)
Cell Movement , Computer Simulation , Models, Molecular , Stress, Mechanical , Cell Physiological Phenomena , Friction , Humans , Surface Properties
14.
Biophys J ; 115(10): 1956-1965, 2018 11 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30393103

ABSTRACT

Compositional asymmetry between the leaflets of bilayer membranes modifies their phase behavior and is thought to influence other important features such as mechanical properties and protein activity. We address here how phase behavior is affected by passive phospholipid flip-flop, such that the compositional asymmetry is not fixed. We predict transitions from "pre-flip-flop" behavior to a restricted set of phase equilibria that can persist in the presence of passive flip-flop. Surprisingly, such states are not necessarily symmetric. We further account for external symmetry breaking, such as a preferential substrate interaction, and show how this can stabilize strongly asymmetric equilibrium states. Our theory explains several experimental observations of flip-flop-mediated changes in phase behavior and shows how domain formation and compositional asymmetry can be controlled in concert, by manipulating passive flip-flop rates and applying external fields.


Subject(s)
Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Phospholipids/chemistry , Kinetics , Thermodynamics
15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(36): 11633-42, 2016 09 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27574865

ABSTRACT

Characterizing the nanoscale dynamic organization within lipid bilayer membranes is central to our understanding of cell membranes at a molecular level. We investigate phase separation and communication across leaflets in ternary lipid bilayers, including saturated lipids with between 12 and 20 carbons per tail. Coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations reveal a novel two-step kinetics due to hydrophobic mismatch, in which the initial response of the apposed leaflets upon quenching is to increase local asymmetry (antiregistration), followed by dominance of symmetry (registration) as the bilayer equilibrates. Antiregistration can become thermodynamically preferred if domain size is restricted below ∼20 nm, with implications for the symmetry of rafts and nanoclusters in cell membranes, which have similar reported sizes. We relate our findings to theory derived from a semimicroscopic model in which the leaflets experience a "direct" area-dependent coupling, and an "indirect" coupling that arises from hydrophobic mismatch and is most important at domain boundaries. Registered phases differ in composition from antiregistered phases, consistent with a direct coupling between the leaflets. Increased hydrophobic mismatch purifies the phases, suggesting that it contributes to the molecule-level lipid immiscibility. Our results demonstrate an interplay of competing interleaflet couplings that affect phase compositions and kinetics, and lead to a length scale that can influence lateral and transverse bilayer organization within cells.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/chemistry , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Kinetics , Membrane Lipids/chemistry , Molecular Conformation , Molecular Dynamics Simulation
16.
Biophys J ; 108(8): 1963-76, 2015 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25902436

ABSTRACT

We derive a mean-field free energy for the phase behavior of coupled bilayer leaflets, which is implicated in cellular processes and important to the design of artificial membranes. Our model accounts for amphiphile-level structural features, particularly hydrophobic mismatch, which promotes antiregistration, in competition with the direct transmidplane coupling usually studied, which promotes registration. We show that the phase diagram of coupled leaflets allows multiple metastable coexistences, and we illustrate the kinetic implications of this with a detailed study of a bilayer of equimolar overall composition. For approximate parameters estimated to apply to phospholipids, equilibrium coexistence is typically registered, but metastable antiregistered phases can be kinetically favored by hydrophobic mismatch. Thus, a bilayer in the spinodal region can require nucleation to equilibrate, in a novel manifestation of Ostwald's rule of stages. Our results provide a framework for understanding disparate existing observations in the literature, elucidating a subtle competition of couplings and a key role for phase-transition kinetics in bilayer phase behavior.


Subject(s)
Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Phase Transition , Surface-Active Agents/chemistry , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Kinetics , Phospholipids/chemistry
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