Formation of recurring transient Ca 2+ -based intercellular communities during Drosophila hematopoiesis

Author:

David Saar Ben1ORCID,Ho Kevin Y. L.2ORCID,Tanentzapf Guy2,Zaritsky Assaf1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Software and Information Systems Engineering, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva 84105, Israel

2. Department of Cellular and Physiological Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver V6T 1Z3, Canada

Abstract

Tissue development occurs through a complex interplay between many individual cells. Yet, the fundamental question of how collective tissue behavior emerges from heterogeneous and noisy information processing and transfer at the single-cell level remains unknown. Here, we reveal that tissue scale signaling regulation can arise from local gap-junction mediated cell–cell signaling through the spatiotemporal establishment of an intermediate-scale of transient multicellular communication communities over the course of tissue development. We demonstrated this intermediate scale of emergent signaling using Ca 2+ signaling in the intact, ex vivo cultured, live developing Drosophila hematopoietic organ, the lymph gland. Recurrent activation of these transient signaling communities defined self-organized signaling “hotspots” that gradually formed over the course of larva development. These hotspots receive and transmit information to facilitate repetitive interactions with nonhotspot neighbors. Overall, this work bridges the scales between single-cell and emergent group behavior providing key mechanistic insight into how cells establish tissue-scale communication networks.

Funder

Israel Council for Higher Education

Israel Science Foundation

Israel Ministry of Science and Technology

Wellcome Leap

German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development

Rosetrees Trust

Canadian Government | Canadian Institutes of Health Research

University of British Columbia

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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