| Literature DB >> 33207225 |
Benoit G Godard1, Rémi Dumollard2, Edwin Munro3, Janet Chenevert2, Céline Hebras2, Alex McDougall2, Carl-Philipp Heisenberg4.
Abstract
Global tissue tension anisotropy has been shown to trigger stereotypical cell division orientation by elongating mitotic cells along the main tension axis. Yet, how tissue tension elongates mitotic cells despite those cells undergoing mitotic rounding (MR) by globally upregulating cortical actomyosin tension remains unclear. We addressed this question by taking advantage of ascidian embryos, consisting of a small number of interphasic and mitotic blastomeres and displaying an invariant division pattern. We found that blastomeres undergo MR by locally relaxing cortical tension at their apex, thereby allowing extrinsic pulling forces from neighboring interphasic blastomeres to polarize their shape and thus division orientation. Consistently, interfering with extrinsic forces by reducing the contractility of interphasic blastomeres or disrupting the establishment of asynchronous mitotic domains leads to aberrant mitotic cell division orientations. Thus, apical relaxation during MR constitutes a key mechanism by which tissue tension anisotropy controls stereotypical cell division orientation.Entities:
Keywords: ascidian; cell division orientation; mitotic rounding; tissue tension
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33207225 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2020.10.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 13.417