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The directional collective migration along traveling signal waves is indispensable for the development in multicellular tissues. However, little is known about how the net motion occurs under wave-like activation while the forces are balanced. To reveal the law of migration with the traveling wave, we study collective migration by considering the signal-dependent coordination of contractile stress and adhesive friction to the substratum. We show that their interplay forms a non-reciprocal motion that enhances the backward motion against a signal wave. Moreover, the relaxation dynamics during this non-reciprocal motion realize a noise filter by which the migration velocity is optimized under a certain wave velocity. Our finding thus brings deep understanding of the rectified migration by a traveling signal wave, which may be involved in wound healing of epithelial tissues.
Spectacular collective phenomena such as jamming, turbulence, wetting, and waves emerge when living cells migrate in groups.
A continuum model of epithelial tissue mechanics was formulated using cellular-level mechanical ingredients and cell morphogenetic processes, including cellular shape changes and cellular rearrangements. This model can include finite deformation, and
We introduce an Active Vertex Model (AVM) for cell-resolution studies of the mechanics of confluent epithelial tissues consisting of tens of thousands of cells, with a level of detail inaccessible to similar methods. The AVM combines the Vertex Model
In the emerging field of 3D bioprinting, cell damage due to large deformations is considered a main cause for cell death and loss of functionality inside the printed construct. Those deformations, in turn, strongly depend on the mechano-elastic respo
To theoretically understand force generation properties of actin filaments, many models consider growing filaments pushing against a movable obstacle or barrier. In order to grow, the filaments need space and hence it is necessary to move the barrier