ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Cells in a tissue mutually coordinate their behaviors to maintain tissue homeostasis and control morphogenetic dynamics. As well as chemical signals, mechanical entities such as force and strain can be possible mediators of the signalling cues for this mutual coordination, but how such mechanical cues can propagate has not been fully understood. Here, we propose a mechanism of long-range force propagation through the extracellular matrix. We experimentally found a novel concentric wave of deformation in the elastic substrate underlying an epithelial monolayer around an extruding cell, under weakly-adhesive conditions which we define in our work. The deformation wave propagates over two cell sizes in ten minutes. The force transmission is revealed by the emergence of a pronounced peak in the deformation field of substrate. We derive a theoretical model based on linear elasticity theory, to analyse the substrate dynamics and to quantitatively validate this model. Through model analysis, we show that this propagation appears as a consequence of the stress exerted by the tissue on a soft substrate sliding on a stiff one. These results infer that the tissue can interact with embedding substrate with weakly adhesive structures to precisely transmit long-range forces for the regulation of a variety of cellular behaviors.
Complex spatiotemporal patterns of action potential duration have been shown to occur in many mammalian hearts due to a period-doubling bifurcation that develops with increasing frequency of stimulation. Here, through high-resolution optical mapping
Adhesive cell-substrate interactions are crucial for cell motility and are responsible for the necessary traction that propels cells. These interactions can also change the shape of the cell, analogous to liquid droplet wetting on adhesive substrates
Couplings between standard model particles and unparticles from a nontrivial scale invariant sector can lead to long range forces. If the forces couple to quantities such as baryon or lepton (electron) number, stringent limits result from tests of th
In embryonic development, programmed cell shape changes are essential for building functional organs, but in many cases the mechanisms that precisely regulate these changes remain unknown. We propose that fluid-like drag forces generated by the motio
We describe a 3D percolation-type approach to modeling of the processes of aging and certain other properties of tissues analyzed as systems consisting of interacting cells. Lattice sites are designated as regular (healthy) cells, senescent cells, or