Abstract
ABSTRACTPhysical processes ultimately drive morphogenetic cell movements. Two proposals are that 1) cells migrate toward stiffer tissue (durotaxis) and that 2) the extent of cell rearrangements reflects liquid-solid tissue phase. It is unclear whether and how these concepts are related. Here, we identify fibronectin-dependent tissue stiffness as a control variable that underlies and unifies these phenomenain vivo. In murine limb bud mesoderm, cells are either caged, move directionally by durotaxis or intercalate as a function of their location along a stiffness gradient. A unifying stiffness-phase transition model that is based on a Landau equation accurately predicts cell diffusivity upon loss or gain of fibronectin. Fibronectin is regulated by a WNT5A-YAP positive feedback pathway that controls cell movements, tissue shape and skeletal pattern. The results identify a key determinant of phase transition and show how durotaxis emerges in a mixed phase environmentin vivo.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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