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Lattice Light Sheet Microscopy Reveals 4D Force Propagation Dynamics and Leading-edge Behaviors in an Embryonic Epithelium in Drosophila

Overview
Journal Curr Biol
Publisher Cell Press
Specialty Biology
Date 2024 Jul 3
PMID 38959881
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Abstract

How pulsed contractile dynamics drive the remodeling of cell and tissue topologies in epithelial sheets has been a key question in development and disease. Due to constraints in imaging and analysis technologies, studies that have described the in vivo mechanisms underlying changes in cell and neighbor relationships have largely been confined to analyses of planar apical regions. Thus, how the volumetric nature of epithelial cells affects force propagation and remodeling of the cell surface in three dimensions, including especially the apical-basal axis, is unclear. Here, we perform lattice light sheet microscopy (LLSM)-based analysis to determine how far and fast forces propagate across different apical-basal layers, as well as where topological changes initiate from in a columnar epithelium. These datasets are highly time- and depth-resolved and reveal that topology-changing forces are spatially entangled, with contractile force generation occurring across the observed apical-basal axis in a pulsed fashion, while the conservation of cell volumes constrains instantaneous cell deformations. Leading layer behaviors occur opportunistically in response to favorable phasic conditions, with lagging layers "zippering" to catch up as new contractile pulses propel further changes in cell topologies. These results argue against specific zones of topological initiation and demonstrate the importance of systematic 4D-based analysis in understanding how forces and deformations in cell dimensions propagate in a three-dimensional environment.

Citing Articles

Nuclei as mechanical bumpers during epithelial remodeling.

de Leeuw N, Budhathoki R, Russell L, Loerke D, Blankenship J J Cell Biol. 2024; 223(12).

PMID: 39325019 PMC: 11450824. DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202405078.