| Literature DB >> 29138312 |
Xingbo Yang1, Dapeng Bi2, Michael Czajkowski3, Matthias Merkel3, M Lisa Manning3, M Cristina Marchetti3.
Abstract
Collective cell migration is a highly regulated process involved in wound healing, cancer metastasis, and morphogenesis. Mechanical interactions among cells provide an important regulatory mechanism to coordinate such collective motion. Using a self-propelled Voronoi (SPV) model that links cell mechanics to cell shape and cell motility, we formulate a generalized mechanical inference method to obtain the spatiotemporal distribution of cellular stresses from measured traction forces in motile tissues and show that such traction-based stresses match those calculated from instantaneous cell shapes. We additionally use stress information to characterize the rheological properties of the tissue. We identify a motility-induced swim stress that adds to the interaction stress to determine the global contractility or extensibility of epithelia. We further show that the temporal correlation of the interaction shear stress determines an effective viscosity of the tissue that diverges at the liquid-solid transition, suggesting the possibility of extracting rheological information directly from traction data.Entities:
Keywords: cell shape; cell stress; phase transition; self-propelled; vertex model
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29138312 PMCID: PMC5715741 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1705921114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205