Artículo
Cortical Tension Allocates the First Inner Cells of the Mammalian Embryo
Samarage, Chaminda R.; White, Melanie D.; Alvarez, Yanina Daniela
; Fierro González, Juan Carlos; Henon, Yann; Jesudason, Edwin C.; Bissiere, Stephanie; Fouras, Andreas; Plachta, Nicolas
Fecha de publicación:
08/2015
Editorial:
Cell Press
Revista:
Developmental Cell
ISSN:
1534-5807
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Every cell in our body originates from the pluripotent inner mass of the embryo, yet it is unknown how biomechanical forces allocate inner cells in vivo. Here we discover subcellular heterogeneities in tensile forces, generated by actomyosin cortical networks, which drive apical constriction to position the first inner cells of living mouse embryos. Myosin II accumulates specifically around constricting cells, and its disruption dysregulates constriction and cell fate. Laser ablations of actomyosin networks reveal that constricting cells have higher cortical tension, generate tension anisotropies and morphological changes in adjacent regions of neighboring cells, and require their neighbors to coordinate their own changes in shape. Thus, tensile forces determine the first spatial segregation of cells during mammalian development. We propose that, unlike more cohesive tissues, the early embryo dissipates tensile forces required by constricting cells via their neighbors, thereby allowing confined cell repositioning without jeopardizing global architecture.
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Identificadores
Colecciones
Articulos(OCA CIUDAD UNIVERSITARIA)
Articulos de OFICINA DE COORDINACION ADMINISTRATIVA CIUDAD UNIVERSITARIA
Articulos de OFICINA DE COORDINACION ADMINISTRATIVA CIUDAD UNIVERSITARIA
Citación
Samarage, Chaminda R.; White, Melanie D.; Alvarez, Yanina Daniela; Fierro González, Juan Carlos; Henon, Yann; et al.; Cortical Tension Allocates the First Inner Cells of the Mammalian Embryo; Cell Press; Developmental Cell; 34; 4; 8-2015; 435-447
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