Crisscross multilayering of cell sheets

Author:

Sarkar Trinish1,Yashunsky Victor12ORCID,Brézin Louis13,Blanch Mercader Carles1,Aryaksama Thibault1,Lacroix Mathilde1ORCID,Risler Thomas1ORCID,Joanny Jean-François13,Silberzan Pascal1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire PhysicoChimie Curie UMR168, Institut Curie, Paris Sciences et Lettres, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Sorbonne Université, 11 Rue Pierre et Marie Curie , 75248 Paris , France

2. Department of Solar Energy and Environmental Physics, The Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Midreshet Ben-Gurion , Negev, 84990 , Israel

3. Collège de France, Paris Sciences et Lettres , 11 place Marcelin Berthelot, 75231 Paris , France

Abstract

Abstract Hydrostatic skeletons such as the Hydra's consist of two stacked layers of muscle cells perpendicularly oriented. In vivo, these bilayers first assemble, and then the muscle fibers of both layers develop and organize with this crisscross orientation. In the present work, we identify an alternative mechanism of crisscross bilayering of myoblasts in vitro, which results from the prior local organization of these active cells in the initial monolayer. The myoblast sheet can be described as a contractile active nematic in which, as expected, most of the +1/2 topological defects associated with this nematic order self-propel. However, as a result of the production of extracellular matrix (ECM) by the cells, a subpopulation of these comet-like defects does not show any self-propulsion. Perpendicular bilayering occurs at these stationary defects. Cells located at the head of these defects converge toward their core where they accumulate until they start migrating on top of the tail of the first layer, while the tail cells migrate in the opposite direction under the head. Since the cells keep their initial orientations, the two stacked layers end up perpendicularly oriented. This concerted process leading to a crisscross bilayering is mediated by the secretion of ECM.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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