Author:
Huebner Robert J.,Weng Shinuo,Lee Chanjae,Sarıkaya Sena,Papoulas Ophelia,Cox Rachael M.,Marcotte Edward M.,Wallingford John B.
Abstract
SummaryAxis extension is a fundamental biological process that shapes multicellular organisms. The design of an animal’s body plan is encoded in the genome and execution of this program is a multiscale mechanical progression involving the coordinated movement of proteins, cells, and whole tissues. Thus, a key challenge to understanding axis extension is connecting events that occur across these various length scales. Here, we use approaches from proteomics, cell biology, and tissue biomechanics to describe how a poorly characterized cell adhesion effector, the Armadillo Repeat protein deleted in Velo-Cardio-Facial syndrome (Arvcf) catenin, controls vertebrate head-to-tail axis extension. We find that Arvcf catenin is required for axis extension within the intact organism but is not required for extension of isolated tissues. We then show that the organism scale phenotype is caused by a modest defect in force production at the tissue scale that becomes apparent when the tissue is challenged by external resistance. Finally, we show that the tissue scale force defect results from dampening of the pulsatile recruitment of cell adhesion and cytoskeletal proteins to cell membranes. These results not only provide a comprehensive understanding of Arvcf function during an essential biological process, but also provide insight into how a modest cellular scale defect in cell adhesion results in an organism scale failure of development.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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