Inflationary theory of branching morphogenesis in the mouse salivary gland

The mechanisms that regulate the patterning of branched epithelia remain a subject of long-standing debate. Recently, it has been proposed that the statistical organization of multiple ductal tissues can be explained through a local self-organizing principle based on the branching-annihilating rando...

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Published inNature communications Vol. 14; no. 1; pp. 3422 - 11
Main Authors Bordeu, Ignacio, Chatzeli, Lemonia, Simons, Benjamin D.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 09.06.2023
Nature Publishing Group
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:The mechanisms that regulate the patterning of branched epithelia remain a subject of long-standing debate. Recently, it has been proposed that the statistical organization of multiple ductal tissues can be explained through a local self-organizing principle based on the branching-annihilating random walk (BARW) in which proliferating tips drive a process of ductal elongation and stochastic bifurcation that terminates when tips encounter maturing ducts. Here, applied to mouse salivary gland, we show the BARW model struggles to explain the large-scale organization of tissue. Instead, we propose that the gland develops as a tip-driven branching- delayed random walk (BDRW). In this framework, a generalization of the BARW, tips inhibited through steric interaction with proximate ducts may continue their branching program as constraints become alleviated through the persistent expansion of the surrounding tissue. This inflationary BDRW model presents a general paradigm for branching morphogenesis when the ductal epithelium grows cooperatively with the domain into which it expands. The authors show that the ramified ductal network of the mouse salivary gland develops from a set of simple probabilistic rules, where ductal elongation and branching are driven by the persistent expansion of the surrounding tissue.
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ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-39124-x