1. Planar polarized contractile actomyosin networks in dynamic tissue morphogenesis
- Author
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Erina Kuranaga and Daiki Umetsu
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Force generation ,Tissue deformation ,Collective behavior ,Shape change ,Morphogenesis ,Actomyosin ,Biology ,Cell biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Planar ,Genetics ,Animals ,Drosophila ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Body Patterning ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The complex shapes of animal bodies are constructed through a sequence of simple physical interactions of constituent cells. Mechanical forces generated by cellular activities, such as division, death, shape change and rearrangement, drive tissue morphogenesis. By confining assembly or disassembly of actomyosin networks within the three-dimensional space of the cell, cells can localize forces to induce tissue deformation. Tissue-scale morphogenesis emerges from a collective behavior of cells that coordinates the force generation in space and time. Thus, the molecular mechanisms that govern the temporal and spatial regulation of forces in individual cells are elemental to organogenesis, and the tissue-scale coordination of forces generated by individual cells is key to determining the final shape of organs.
- Published
- 2017
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