| Literature DB >> 35320447 |
Charlie Duclut1, Joris Paijmans1, Mandar M Inamdar2, Carl D Modes3,4,5, Frank Jülicher6,7,8.
Abstract
In amorphous solids as in tissues, neighbor exchanges can relax local stresses and allow the material to flow. In this paper, we use an anisotropic vertex model to study T1 rearrangements in polygonal cellular networks. We consider two different physical realizations of the active anisotropic stresses: (i) anisotropic bond tension and (ii) anisotropic cell stress. Interestingly, the two types of active stress lead to patterns of relative orientation of T1 transitions and cell elongation that are different. Our work suggests that these two realizations of anisotropic active stresses can be observed in vivo. We describe and explain these results through the lens of a continuum description of the tissue as an anisotropic active material. We furthermore discuss the energetics of the dynamic tissue and express the energy balance in terms of internal elastic energy, mechanical work, chemical work and heat. This allows us to define active T1 transitions that can perform mechanical work while consuming chemical energy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35320447 PMCID: PMC8942949 DOI: 10.1140/epje/s10189-022-00175-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Phys J E Soft Matter ISSN: 1292-8941 Impact factor: 1.624
Fig. 1Mechanics and dynamics of cellular networks. A Definition of the cell state variables. Left shows the cell area (blue patch), cell perimeter (green line) and bond length (red line) between the vertices with positions and . Right shows the cell elongation tensor which is constructed from the bond nematic tensors as defined in Eq. (6). B Cell dynamic processes can lead to tissue deformation as an effect of cell shape changes, T1 transitions, cell divisions or cell extrusions. C Large-scale tissue deformation can be driven by collective cell dynamics: cell shape changes (top), anisotropic T1 transitions (middle) and anisotropic cell divisions (bottom). The tissue may also deform as a result of changes in the mean cell shape of the cellular network
Fig. 3Dynamics of tissue shear in a network with anisotropic bond tension (left) or anisotropic cell stress (right) under a stress-free boundary condition. Top row. Total tissue shear (blue) decomposed into contributions of cell elongation change (green) and shear by topological rearrangements (red). The tissue stress is shown in grey (and vanishes as stress-free boundary conditions are used here). Only xx-components of the tensors are shown, xy-components are zero. Crosses are data from the vertex model averaged over 100 realizations. Error bars are smaller than the marker size. Solid lines are obtained by fits of the continuum model. Bottom row. Schematics of the cell rearrangement and elongation explaining the observed dynamics
Fig. 2Relaxation dynamics after activation of anisotropic active stress under a fixed box boundary condition with anisotropic bond tension (left) or anisotropic cell stress (right). Top row. Total tissue shear (blue) decomposed into contributions of cell elongation change (green) and shear by topological rearrangements (red). The tissue stress is shown in grey. Only xx-components of the tensors are shown, xy-components are zero. Crosses are data from the vertex model averaged over 100 realizations. Error bars are smaller than the marker size. Solid lines are obtained by fits of the continuum model. Bottom row. Schematics of the cell rearrangement and elongation explaining the observed dynamics
Summary of the steady-state relative orientations. The tensor gives the direction of the tissue polarity. The tensor indicates the direction of topological transitions (along which new bonds are opened), is the tensor for the rate of change of cell elongation and is the tissue shear rate, which indicates the direction along which the tissue elongates