학술논문

Fluidization-mediated tissue spreading by mitotic cell rounding and non-canonical Wnt signalling
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Nature Cell Biology. 21(2):169-178
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
1465-7392
1476-4679
Abstract
Tissue morphogenesis is driven by mechanical forces that elicit changes in cell size, shape and motion. The extent by which forces deform tissues critically depends on the rheological properties of the recipient tissue. Yet, whether and how dynamic changes in tissue rheology affect tissue morphogenesis and how they are regulated within the developing organism remain unclear. Here, we show that blastoderm spreading at the onset of zebrafish morphogenesis relies on a rapid, pronounced and spatially patterned tissue fluidization. Blastoderm fluidization is temporally controlled by mitotic cell rounding-dependent cell–cell contact disassembly during the last rounds of cell cleavages. Moreover, fluidization is spatially restricted to the central blastoderm by local activation of non-canonical Wnt signalling within the blastoderm margin, increasing cell cohesion and thereby counteracting the effect of mitotic rounding on contact disassembly. Overall, our results identify a fluidity transition mediated by loss of cell cohesion as a critical regulator of embryo morphogenesis.
Studying blastoderm spreading in zebrafish, Petridou et al. discover that this process is facilitated by tissue fluidization, mediated by a local loss of cell–cell adhesion during mitotic rounding and spatially restricted by Wnt.