Mechanochemical bistability of intestinal organoids enables robust morphogenesis
How pattern and form are generated in a reproducible manner during embryogenesis remains poorly understood. Intestinal organoid morphogenesis involves a number of mechanochemical regulators, including cell-type specific cytoskeletal forces and osmotically-driven lumen volume changes. However, whethe...
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Main Authors | , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
28.03.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | How pattern and form are generated in a reproducible manner during
embryogenesis remains poorly understood. Intestinal organoid morphogenesis
involves a number of mechanochemical regulators, including cell-type specific
cytoskeletal forces and osmotically-driven lumen volume changes. However,
whether and how these forces are coordinated in time and space via feedbacks to
ensure robust morphogenesis remains unclear. Here, we propose a minimal
physical model of organoid morphogenesis with local cellular mechano-sensation,
where lumen volume changes can impact epithelial shape via both direct
mechanical (passive) and indirect mechanosensitive (active) mechanisms. We show
how mechano-sensitive feedbacks on cytoskeletal tension generically give rise
to morphological bistability, where both bulged (open) and budded (closed)
crypt states are possible and dependent on the history of volume changes. Such
bistability can explain several paradoxical experimental observations, such as
the importance of the timing of lumen shrinkage and robustness of the final
morphogenetic state to mechanical perturbations. More quantitatively, we
performed mechanical and pharmacological experiments to validate the key
modelling assumptions and make quantitative predictions on organoid
morphogenesis. This suggests that bistability arising from feedbacks between
cellular tensions and fluid pressure could be a general mechanism to allow for
the coordination of multicellular shape changes in developing systems. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2403.19900 |